Entre la presidencia y las elecciones: Petro tensa las reglas y mantiene el foco de atención en plena campaña
Gustavo Petro no puede intervenir en la campaña electoral que elegirĂĄ a su sucesor, pero le estĂĄ resultando difĂcil evitarlo. Con su cuenta de X abierta las 24 horas del dĂa, el presidente colombiano lleva una semana entrando en un charco detrĂĄs de otro, bordeando los mĂĄrgenes legales que le impiden involucrarse en la contienda. Ciudadanos, rivales polĂticos e incluso autoridades electorales le critican por ello, pero se resiste a salir del foco. âTengo todo el derecho a contestar las crĂticas que se hagan de mi gobierno por parte de los candidatos presidencialesâ, escribiĂł este sĂĄbado. âLo que hacemos los presidentes todos los dĂas es hacer PolĂtica con P mayĂșsculaâ, añadiĂł en otro trino.
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MĂ©xico redobla su campaña contra el trĂĄfico de armas con la inercia de los Ășltimos logros en seguridad
Durante la cumbre organizada por Donald Trump con otros 12 presidentes de la derecha latinoamericana, el magnate republicano repitiĂł desde uno de sus campos de golf en Florida que MĂ©xico es el epicentro de la violencia de los cĂĄrteles de la droga, que controlan el paĂs y que va a âerradicarlosâ cueste lo que cueste. La presidenta mexicana, Claudia Sheinbaum, que no fue invitada a la cumbre, no respondiĂł de manera directa a la enĂ©sima provocaciĂłn, pero durante la semana fue marcando con insistencia una agenda muy especĂfica, que no es nueva, pero que se ha intensificado en los Ășltimos dĂas. âNosotros hacemos nuestra parte, pero ellos tambiĂ©n tiene una responsabilidad allĂĄâ, dijo la mandataria refiriĂ©ndose principalmente al control del trĂĄfico de armas, remarcando que mĂĄs del 75% de las armas que usan los grupos del crimen organizado viene, segĂșn las propias cifras del Departamento de Justicia estadounidense, del otro lado de la frontera.
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Las dos almas de Kast: entre Portales y Piñera
El punto inicial de la caminata que realizĂł la noche del miĂ©rcoles el presidente JosĂ© Antonio Kast para ingresar a La Moneda por primera vez como mandatario fue la escultura del polĂtico conservador Diego Portales (1793-1837). Minutos despuĂ©s lo mencionĂł en su primer discurso, afirmando que dejĂł una enseñanza que sigue vigente sobre cĂłmo debe gobernarse una naciĂłn: âCon carĂĄcter y el carĂĄcter no es arbitrariedad. Es estar dispuesto a hacer lo que hay que hacer aunque sea incĂłmodo, impopular. Y la autoridad tiene que ser fuerte, porque nuestro paĂs, en esta hora, asĂ lo demandaâ. Ante la ciudadanĂa hablĂł de que el Gobierno de emergencia que prometiĂł no era un eslogan. âEs lo que vamos a vivir. Es orden donde hay caosâ, apuntĂł. Al dĂa siguiente, en la inauguraciĂłn de la cĂĄtedra SebastiĂĄn Piñera en la Universidad del Desarrollo (UDD), en honor al expresidente de centroderecha (2010-2014 y 2018-2022), le dijo a los presentes, la mayorĂa moderados de su sector: âLos veo y veo historia y una buena continuidad de lo que nos toca hoy dĂaâ. Sus palabras desvelan las posibles dos brĂșjulas de lo que serĂĄ su mandato en los prĂłximos cuatro años: entre el estilo portaliano y el piñerismo.
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MarĂa Corina Machado consolida sus alianzas mĂĄs conservadoras antes de regresar a Caracas
La presencia de la lĂder opositora y Premio Nobel de la Paz, MarĂa Corina Machado, en la toma de posesiĂłn del presidente de Chile, JosĂ© Antonio Kast, ha terminado de perfilar una estrategia internacional de alianzas con la derecha y la extrema derecha global. Machado, que ha sido aclamada como una heroĂna por la diĂĄspora venezolana en Santiago de Chile esta semana, ha recibido las llaves de la ciudad y se ha convertido en protagonista permanente de noticias.
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La noche en que los cubanos tiraron a la hoguera el comunismo
El Gobierno cubano congregĂł, para la mañana de este sĂĄbado, a un grupo de hombres y mujeres a gritar consignas en el mismo lugar donde la noche anterior un puñado de adolescentes incendiĂł la ideologĂa. Salieron a la calle, en medio de la oscuridad y el hartazgo municipal, y terminaron prendiendo fuego a la sede del Partido Comunista de Cuba, el Ășnico posible en el paĂs, forjado para que militara el pueblo y no para que lo hicieran arder. Pero el Partido, como el sistema, los habĂa traicionado.
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Lord Ashcroftâs VCs and GCs to have a new home at the National Army Museum

LONDON, March 14, 2026 /PRNewswire/ â Lord Ashcroftâs collection of Victoria Crosses and George Crosses is to have a new home at the National Army Museum in London.
The collection is the largest of its kind in the world. It has been built up by Lord Ashcroft over the past 40 years and includes nearly 250 VCs and a smaller number of GCs. It was previously housed at the Imperial War Museum, London, which closed the Lord Ashcroft Gallery in September last year after 15 years.

Lord Ashcroft spoke today of his delight at the news: âI am thrilled to have found such a superb location for this unique collection of gallantry medals. I am so pleased that these VCs and GCs, spanning many major wars and conflicts of the past two centuries, will now be enjoyed by the public once again.
âThe National Army Museum shares my passion for the decorations themselves and also to tell the incredible stories of bravery that go with them. I look forward to a long and happy partnership with the Museum for many years to come.â
Justin Maciejewski, the Director of the National Army Museum, said: âWe are honoured to be entrusted with these VCs and GCs from the Lord Ashcroft Medal Collection. We are grateful to Lord Ashcroft for his continued generosity and commitment in championing these stories of extraordinary courage.
âThe National Army Museum shares the history and heritage of our soldiers across the globe and down the centuries. Within that wider narrative, these medals, and the individual acts of extraordinary bravery and valour they represent, form a powerful part of the Armyâs story.â
Chris Finney, a Trustee of the National Army Museum and the Chair of the VC and GC Association, said: âThis rare and expansive collection spans centuries of military service, sacrifice, and extraordinary bravery across the Armed Forces.
âWe are privileged to be given the opportunity to share these medalsâand the inspiring personal stories they representâwith visitors, and online for the wider public, where they can continue to inspire people of all ages for generations to come.â
Lord Ashcroft began his collection of VCs in 1986 with the purchase of a single medal group at auction. The VC, instituted by Queen Victoria in 1856, is Britain and the Commonwealthâs most prestigious decoration for valour in the presence of the enemy. The GC, created by George VI in 1940, is Britain and the Commonwealthâs most prestigious decoration for gallantry not in the presence of the enemy and it has been awarded to several civilians for acts of valour.
Lord Ashcroftâs VCs and GCs are part of the wider Lord Ashcroft Medal Collection, which includes Special Forces decorations and medals for valour in the skies and at sea. Lord Ashcroftâs long passion for gallantry awards was initially inspired by his late father, Eric, who as a young officer took part in the D-Day Landings on June 6 1944.
Lord Ashcroftâs collection of VCs includes one of just three VCs and Barsâthe equivalent of two VCsâthat have been awarded over the past 170 years. This is the medal group awarded to Captain Noel Chavasse VC & Bar, MC, a medical officer who served and was killed during the Great War.
Following the closure of the previous gallery, Lord Ashcroft has made his collection accessible digitally through his website. This new partnership with the National Army Museum will allow the public to visit the collection and be inspired by the remarkable stories they represent.
The VC and GC collection will go on display at the National Army Museum within the next two years. In the meantime, from July onwards some of Lord Ashcroftâs medals will go on display at the museum, including pop-up exhibitions.
As the home of the Armyâs history and heritage, the National Army Museum will be displaying items from the Lord Ashcroft Medal Collection alongside its existing collections of objects, archives and artworks, telling the stories of soldiers and their serviceâincluding the origins of the Victoria Cross in the Crimean War.
Lord Ashcroftâs VCs and GCs will be shared on a long-term loan with the National Army Museum. Alongside their display, the Museum is planning a programme of exhibitions, educational resources, talks, tours and digital content exploring the human stories of courage behind the decorations.
Further details of the new partnership between Lord Ashcroft and the National Army Museum relating to the display of his VC and GC collection will be released over the coming months.
NOTE TO EDITORS
For more information on Lord Ashcroftâs work, visit:
Join in the conversation on:
More information on the Museum:
Opening times:
Tuesday to Sunday
10:00 â 17:00
Address:
National Army Museum, Royal Hospital Road, London, SW3 4HT
Website:
nam.ac.uk
National Army Museum
The National Army Museum shares the history and heritage of our soldiers and their service in the Army, across the globe and down the centuries. Through our collections we explore the history of the Army from its origins to the present day. We aim to engage and inspire everyone with the stories of our soldiers and how their service shapes our world; past, present and future.
The Return Of Textbooks

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Sat. Mar. 14, 2026: I recently wrote an article entitled âGadgets Creating More Problems in Educationâ. Â In it, I made the case that technology through the steady introduction of electronic devices was threatening to reduce the gains that traditional learning had brought.
The article went on to make the case that dependence on electronic device has led to studentsâ inability to develop their critical thinking skills. Simple foundational tasks now require an electronic device of one kind or another.Â

Compounding the problem even further, is the Caribbean Examinations Council, (CXC) sanctioning the âlimited useâ of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the preparation of candidatesâ school-based assessments, (SBAs). Â
We in this region seem to be quickly heading down a slippery slope from which we may never recover.  Meanwhile in Denmark they have taken the bold decision to go in the opposite direction. The government has banned cellphones in classrooms, as well as other electronic devices. They are being replaced by traditional textbooks and studentsâ God given ability to think independent of another human being.
The decision to return to traditional textbooks instead of tablets and other digital devices was based on the fact that, over a period of one decade it was observed that students have trouble concentrating. Additionally, it was found that most students, instead of focusing on their classwork would be watching a video or worse.
In Denmark, computers are used sparingly and ALWAYS under supervision. The data suggest that Danish teens spend an average of five hours per day on their electronic devices, and their mental health has been worsened according to the Childrenâs Wellbeing Commission.

Textbooks have long been the cornerstone of educational resources, providing structured and comprehensive content that supports learning. Textbooks offer a coherent flow of information, guiding students through complex topics in a systematic manner. This helps students build upon their knowledge incrementally, reinforcing concepts. For example, mathematics textbooks often introduce fundamental concepts before advancing to more complex theories. This enable students to develop a strong foundation before tackling more challenging problems.
Textbooks provide detailed explanations, examples and exercises that promote critical thinking and problem-solving skills. Textbooks serve as valuable tools for long-term retention of information. Studies have shown that physical textbooks can enhance learning by reducing distractions that often accompany electronic devices.
Harvard University professor, Steven Pinker agrees with this assertion. He admits: âstudents do read lessâŠthey spend more time on extracurricular activities than on classwork.â Professor Pinker agrees with something that I have been saying for a long time âtaking notes leads to better memory than using a screen.â He cites the principle of cognitive psychology: âwhen you have to think about something, you have got to process its meaning, when itâs not just a bunch of words, then you actually remember better.â
If we are to overcome the other challenges in education, we must find a way to make students read more. One sure way of achieving this goal, is by getting our students to read from actual textbooks, instead of an online version which is placed on Google Classroom.  The tactile experience of flipping through pages can aid in memory retention, as students are more likely to engage with the material actively.
Antigua and Barbuda and indeed the rest of the OECS, need to go in the direction where the evidence points â not backwards. Our students deserve no less.
EDITORâS NOTE: Mr. Nicholas is a proud graduate of the Antigua Grammar School, Antigua State College, and the Antigua and Barbuda International Institute of Technology. A dedicated private mathematics tutor, he is passionate about helping students move from foundational understanding to confident mastery. Committed to the renewal of critical thinking among young people, Mr. Nicholas is also a political strategist and public speaker who contributes thoughtful insight to conversations on education, leadership, and national development.
Delcy Rodriguez cancels meeting with Colombian president Gustavo Petro
A meeting due to take place today between acting Venezuelan President Delcy RodrĂguez and Colombian President Gustavo Petro was cancelled at the last minute.
Venezuelan authorities yesterday pulled out of the meeting, which was scheduled to take place on the two countriesâ shared border, citing security reasons.Â
The encounter would have been RodrĂguezâs first with a foreign leader since taking over from strongman Nicolas Maduro, who was ousted in a U.S. military operation in January.Â
The planned meeting was due to take place at the Atanasio Girardot International Bridge, which connects Colombia and Venezuela.Â
It had been initiated by Colombian authorities as an opportunity for the two leaders to discuss issues on the bilateral agenda, including interests in border security, drug trafficking and the potential for Colombia to import Venezuelan natural gas.
In a joint statement on Thursday, the Colombian and Venezuelan governments explained the cancellation was due to unforeseen circumstances but have not provided further details, reporting they intend to reschedule in the near future.
Following the cancellation of the planned presidential summit, ministers from Gustavo Petroâs administration travelled to Caracas to sustain diplomatic engagement and avoid disrupting recent progress in bilateral relations.Â
Their agenda centred on reviving cross-border trade, advancing energy collaboration â including potential repairs to the Antonio Ricaurte gas pipeline â and continuing coordination on security matters along the shared border.Â
The visit was intended to maintain momentum in cooperation, with relations between Colombia and Venezuela showing signs of improvement since Maduroâs ouster.
Venezuelans strike against Delcy RodrĂguezâs regime
Shortly before yesterdayâs cancellation of the planned meeting, protests were reported in Caracas demanding an increase in the minimum wage. Unconfirmed videos on social media purported to show elderly demonstrators breaking through police cordons during the demonstration.
RodrĂguez was appointed acting president this year by Venezuelaâs Supreme Tribunal of Justice after the U.S. ousted strongman NicolĂĄs Maduro and has served as the countryâs vice president since JuneâŻ2018.Â
In early March, RodrĂguez publicly reaffirmed her governmentâs commitment to diplomatic dialogue with the United States as part of efforts to ease tensions following the U.S. military operation that captured former President NicolĂĄs Maduro.
Featured image description: President Gustavo Petro at a cabinet meeting, October 22, 2025.
Featured image credit: @InfoPresidencia via X.
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Shaggy Teams Up With Robin Thicke For New Song

News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Fri. Mar. 13, 2026: Grammy-winning Jamaican dancehall superstar Shaggy has officially announced that his new album âLotteryâ will be released on May 15th through VP Records and Ranch Entertainment.

To build anticipation for the album, Shaggy has dropped a new single titled âLooking Lovely,â featuring American singer Robin Thicke. The upbeat track blends dancehall and pop influences, continuing Shaggyâs tradition of cross-genre collaborations.
The upcoming album has already generated buzz through a series of previously released singles, including âTil A Mawninâ featuring Sting, âBoom Bodyâ featuring Akon and Aidonia, and the fan-favorite âDancehall Nice,â which features reggae legend Beres Hammond alongside dancehall star Dexta Daps.
Much of the âLotteryâ album was produced by Shaggy himself together with longtime collaborator Shane Hoosong, a partnership that has helped shape many of the artistâs recent musical projects.
The new project is expected to showcase Shaggyâs signature fusion of dancehall, reggae and international pop influences while bringing together artists from across the Caribbean and global music scenes.
With multiple high-profile collaborations already released ahead of the album, anticipation is building among fans eager to hear the full project when âLotteryâ drops on May 15th.
Shaggy, one of the Caribbeanâs most globally recognized music stars, continues to expand his legacy by bridging dancehall roots with international audiences.
Check out the collaboration with Robin Thicke HERE
Orville Richard Burrell, CD, known professionally as Shaggy, scored hits with the songs âIt Wasnât Meâ, âBoombasticâ, âIn the Summertimeâ, âOh Carolinaâ, and âAngel.â He has been nominated for eight Grammy Awards, winning twice for Best Reggae Album with Boombastic in 1996 and 44/876 with Sting in 2019, and has won the Brit Award for International Male Solo Artist in 2002.
In 2007, he was awarded the Jamaican Order of Distinction with the rank of Commander. In 2022, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree from Brown University.
Trump eyes Venezuelaâs lawless critical minerals trade
As Venezuela moves closer to approving a mining law that would open up rare earths and other minerals to foreign investment, the countryâs rich deposits could be placed at the center of a struggle for profit between the U.S., China and Colombian, Venezuelan and Brazilian armed groups operating in the country.Â
Since taking office last year, Donald Trumpâs administration has blown up dozens of alleged drug boats in the Pacific and Caribbean, launched military operations inside Ecuador against drug traffickers, provided intelligence to Mexicoâs military to take out the leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, and captured President NicolĂĄs Maduro, accusing him of heading the Cartel de los Soles.Â
Analysts say that Venezuelaâs mining outposts â many of which are controlled by armed groups including Colombiaâs National Liberation Army (ELN), dissidents of the now-demobilized Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Brazilâs Comando Vermelho (CV) and Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC), as well as Venezuelan criminal groups â could be the next area in Latin America where Trump sets his sights.Â
Bram Ebus, a consultant for the International Crisis Group and the co-founder of Amazon Underworld, told Latin America Reports that âa scenario is emerging in which further military action, whether by the Colombian army with U.S. military support or through direct special forces involvement, could target armed groups like the National Liberation Army (ELN) under a counternarcotics narrative, while pursuing the parallel objective of securing influence over resource-rich areasâ.
For over a decade, groups like the ELN have been expanding their presence in Venezuelaâs Amazon rainforest region and exhorting local miners who are exploiting everything from gold, cassiterite (tin), wolframite (tungsten), and coltan (niobium and tantalum) ores and more.Â
Amid the growing demand for critical minerals in our current geopolitical landscape, Ebus pointed out that the U.S. could be gunning for Venezuelaâs critical mineral resources.
Last week, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum met with interim-President Delcy Rodriguez in Caracas to discuss rare earth minerals, bringing with him âover two dozen American companies with us today, some of the biggest, strongest, best mining and minerals companies in the worldâ.
The proposed mining law would give the U.S. greater access to critical minerals.
Ebus said that âone possibility is that U.S. corporations get involved in mining, but since Washington wants to secure access to the supply chain, it is also possible that U.S. refiners get privileged access to minerals sourced by public companies.â
As soon as Secretary Burgum landed back in the U.S., the administration authorized transactions with Venezuelan state-owned gold mining company Minerven, El Pais reported. The license also restricted access for companies doing business with U.S. rivals Iran, Russia and China.Â
Though itâs difficult to assess the full Chinese buyer presence in the region, Ebus said that âwe know that Chinese citizens have been entering Venezuela via Puerto Carreño, on the Colombian side of the border, and that mines report Chinese buyers on-siteâ.Â
He also noted that âtaking into account historical China-Venezuela migration patterns, we consider some may hold Venezuelan citizenship. Shipping data also shows direct shipments from both Colombia and Venezuela to Chinese companies.â
As Trump moves to edge out China from the Western Hemisphere via his âDonroe Doctrineâ, Ebus said itâs likely the U.S. will âdirectly clash with the interest of Chinaâ and that, in the Amazon region, âthere is a concrete risk of direct or indirect U.S. military involvement, or sanctions, to secure access to rare earthsâ.Â
Whatâs more, Ebus explained, this competition for rare earths could spill over outside of Venezuela to neighboring countries with deposits.Â
âThis is a dynamic that extends beyond Venezuela to, for example, include Ecuador and Brazilâ, where uncharted deposits of critical and transition minerals are located at the tri-border.Â
He suggested that U.S. activity will face challenges given the level of authority the criminal groups have in the Amazon.Â
Historically, the ELN has used Venezuela as a safe haven from Colombiaâs army, and as Maduroâs government faced economic pressures, their illicit mining activity was âtacitly approved by Caracasâ, said Ebus. Â
This form of âcriminal governanceâ has allowed the group to maintain its presence.
âCritical mineral mines now fall under its control [the ELN], with operations run under extreme violence, including summary executions and strict social control over local populationsâ, Ebus added.Â
Venezuelan military forces, other Colombian armed groups including FARC dissidents, and Brazil organized crime groups Comando Vermelho (CV) and Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC) are also present, meaning âincreased competition over mineral-rich territories is a distinct and growing prospectâ.
This will further complicate matters for the U.S.
Featured image: A fragment of mine soil rich in critical minerals.
Image credit: Bram Ebus, co-director, Amazon Underworld
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Cuban government confirms talks with Washington
Cuban President DĂaz-Canel confirmed earlier today that the Cuban and American governments are engaged in official negotiations with the aim of halting the recent escalation of tensions between Washington and Havana.
âCuban functionaries recently had conversations with representatives of the Government of the United States to find, by way of dialogue, the potential solution to the bilateral differences that exist between our two nations,â DĂaz-Canel told journalists in a televised address.
His comments come amidst months of speculation about clandestine negotiations between Washington and Havana as the U.S. enforces a total oil blockade on Cuba in the hopes of forcing political regime change.Â
The Cuban state had, before this morning, refused to acknowledge the existence of official dialogue with the U.S. government; DĂaz-Canel cited the revolutionary governmentâs aversion to giving into âspeculationâ about a particularly âsensitiveâ diplomatic process.
Washington, however, has previously referred to talks with Havana but has made no guarantee regarding a diplomatic solution to the tensions between the two countries. U.S. President Donald Trump has suggested that both âfriendlyâ and âunfriendlyâ options for a Cuba settlement remain on the table.Â
Although the U.S. leader has not specified what these options may entail, the âfriendlyâ deal likely refers to some kind of economic arrangement that sees the Cuban government liberalize the economy in exchange for an end to American sanctions. The âunfriendlyâ deal could involve regime change by military force, a method used by the Trump administration in Venezuela and Iran.Â
Although the breadth and full agenda of the talks remains unknown, DĂaz-Canel mentioned that he had agreed to the inclusion of the Cuban diaspora, which is mainly concentrated in the United States, in economic life in Cuba proper.Â
DĂaz-Canelâs acknowledgement of talks follows an announcement of a prisoner release by the Cuban government late on Thursday. Although the Cuban government implied that this release had been a result of dialogue with the Vatican, its proximity to todayâs statements could suggest Havana is willing to make political concessions to reach a diplomatic solution with the U.S.
The United States has reportedly proposed a deal with Cuba that would allow the Cuban leadership a peaceful political exit strategy, but DĂaz-Canel has given no indication that a fundamental political change on the island is imminent.
Instead, he said that the current negotiations were being conducted with the express consent and at the direction of the âGeneral of the Armyâ and âhistoric leader of our Revolutionâ RaĂșl Castro. DĂaz-Canel also added that the negotiations would base themselves upon a mutual respect for âequalityâ, âthe political systems of both countries, sovereignty and self-determinationâ.
Responding to the announcement, a functionary of the Cuban Foreign Ministry, who asked to remain anonymous, told Latin America Reports: âOur willingness to converse with the United States has always been thereâ.Â
However, reiterating the Cuban Presidentâs statements, they added, âwe must resolve our differences through respectful dialogue between equals with respect for our sovereigntyâ.Â
But as negotiations take place, the U.S. continues its campaign of maximum pressure.
DĂaz-Canel also revealed in his address today that not a single oil tanker had reached Cuba in three months as he named the U.S.-sanctioned âenergy blockadeâ as the biggest crisis currently facing the country.Â
A Russian tanker carrying 200,000 barrels of oil was recently diverted away from the island under suspected U.S. pressure. Venezuela, Cubaâs erstwhile closest regional ally and chief oil supplier, has also been blocked by Washington from providing the island with energy supplies.
As the U.S. blockade pushes Cubaâs economic and humanitarian infrastructure towards collapse, hope for some form of peaceful negotiated settlement remains.Â
Featured Image: Cuban President Miguel DĂaz-Canel
Image Credit: Russian Duma via Wikimedia Commons
License: Creative Commons LicensesÂ
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Cuba confirms talks with the United States amid its deepest energy crisis in years
Cuban President Miguel DĂaz-Canel said on Friday that his government has recently held talks with U.S. officials, the first public acknowledgment of such bilateral contacts in more than a decade, as the island faces a severe fuel and electricity crisis. He said the exchanges were aimed at seeking solutions to bilateral differences and exploring areas of cooperation based on equality, sovereignty and mutual respect.
Caribbean Flavors Still Shape The Food Of Panama

News Americas, PANAMA CITY, Panama, Fri. Mar. 13, 2026: Â I recently traveled to Panama to celebrate my auntâs 70th birthday and found something I did not fully expect â the unmistakable taste of the Caribbean â almost everywhere in the local food.
From coconut rice and fried plantains to seafood simmered in coconut milk and fiery peppers, the flavors felt instantly familiar to anyone raised in the Caribbean. And that is no coincidence.

Coconut rice served with plantains and fish at En La Fonda in Panama. (NewsAmericasnow.com image)
Panamaâs cuisine carries a deep Caribbean imprint, largely because thousands of West Indians helped build the Panama Canal more than a century ago. Workers from Jamaica, Barbados and other Caribbean islands arrived during the canal construction period between the late 1800s and 1914, bringing with them their cooking techniques, spices and ingredients.

Mahi Mahi in Coconut milk at Kobore in Panama City, Panama. (NewsAmericasnow.com image)
Those traditions never left.
Today, the Caribbean influence remains especially visible in coastal areas like ColĂłn and Bocas del Toro and throughout Panama City itself, where Afro-Antillean communities helped shape the nationâs culinary identity.
Many of the ingredients and flavor profiles are immediately recognizable to Caribbean palates â coconut milk, thyme, curry powder, plantains and spicy peppers such as the Scotch bonnet or the local ajĂ chombo.

From empanadas to salsa at En La Fonda in Panama City, Panama. (NewsAmericasnow.com image)
Rice and beans cooked in coconut milk are common staples, similar to Jamaican rice and peas. Seafood is often simmered in rich coconut sauces, while stewed meats reflect the cooking traditions Caribbean migrants brought with them.
During my visit, I encountered these flavors again and again.

Dinner served in banana leaves at En La Fonda, Panama. (NewsAmericasnow.com image)
One of my first local meals was at En La Fonda in Panama Cityâs historic Old Town, where I enjoyed fried fish served with coconut rice, fried plantains and vegetables. The dish could easily have come from a Caribbean seaside restaurant.

An Embera woman serves tourists patacones and fried tilapia in banana leave pouches in Panama. (NewsAmericasnow.com image)
Later, during a visit to an EmberĂĄ Indigenous village outside the capital, lunch included crispy patacones â twice-fried green plantains â paired with fried tilapia. Again, the Caribbean influence was unmistakable.

Appetizers are served in a calabash at Kobore in Panama City, Panama. (NewsAmericasnow.com image)
Another highlight came in Casco Viejo, the beautifully restored historic district of Panama City, where I dined at the elegant restaurant Kobore. There, I had a delicious mahi-mahi dish served in a rich coconut milk sauce that instantly transported me back to the Caribbean.
On my final night in Panama, dinner along the Amador Causeway at Praia Amador brought yet another familiar plate â prawns in coconut milk served with coconut rice.
Of course, the meal was washed down with Balboa, Panamaâs well-known national beer.
Across the meals, the flavors were bold, fragrant and deeply Caribbean. Coconut milk and coconut oil featured heavily, alongside seafood such as corvina, shrimp and octopus. Plantains appeared in many forms â fried, flattened into patacones, or even mashed.
Breakfast even brought a surprise. At the Renaissance Hotel in Panama City, the restaurant Lila introduced me to mashed plantains â a dish I had never considered eating in the morning and plantain casserole, another example of the regionâs creative use of the plantain.
The Caribbean culinary legacy in Panama goes beyond just a few dishes. It represents generations of cultural exchange between Afro-Caribbean migrants and the local population, creating what many describe as an Afro-Panamanian or Afro-Antillean culinary tradition.
Among the most iconic foods are bon bread â a spiced sweet bread popular in Afro-Antillean communities â codfish fritters, and souse, a pickled dish made from pig feet or cow heel. Sounds familiar? Because we in the West Indies have these too!
Together, these foods tell the story of a migration that reshaped Panamaâs culture.
The workers who arrived to build the canal did far more than dig one of the worldâs most important waterways. They left behind traditions that remain alive in music, language and especially food.
One simple example is the coconut rice often served across Panama.
Here is a recipe for Panamanian Coconut Rice with Red Beans, a dish that perfectly captures the Caribbean flavor influence.

Coconut rice served on a banana leaf at En La Fonda in Panama City, Panama. (NewsAmericasnow.com image)
âą 200g long grain rice
âą 500ml vegetable stock
âą 200ml coconut milk
âą 1 onion
âą 1 red pepper
âą 2 tablespoons oil
âą 1 can red beans
âą Sea salt and white pepper
The result is a fragrant dish that reflects the Caribbean flavors that traveled with workers more than a century ago and still define parts of Panamaâs culinary landscape today.
For Caribbean visitors, the experience can feel surprisingly familiar. Sometimes, a single bite of coconut rice or fried plantains is enough to remind you that the Caribbean story extends far beyond the islands themselves.
EDITORâS NOTE: Felicia J. Persaud is CEO of Invest Caribbean and AI Capital Exchange and founder of NewsAmericasNow.com.
Uruguayan fugitive SebastiĂĄn Marset captured in Bolivia and placed in U.S. custody
Suspected Uruguayan drug trafficker SebastiĂĄn Marset was captured on Friday in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia, in an operation that ends one of the Southern Coneâs longest and most visible manhunts. Paraguayan authorities confirmed the arrest and said Marset had been secured after a raid carried out by Bolivian forces.
Cuban government pledges to release 51 prisoners after talks with Vatican
In an unexpected move, the Cuban Foreign Ministry announced on Thursday night that the Cuban government would release 51 prisoners in the coming days âin the spirit of goodwillâ.Â
According to the Cuban government the decision, described as âsovereignâ in the statement, was taken as a result of its âclose relationshipâ with the Vatican, suggesting that the Holy See had a significant part to play in the prisoner release.
The prisoner release comes amidst severe tensions between Cuba and the U.S. as Washington continues its campaign of economic pressure to try to force regime change on the island.Â
Although the Cuban government denies that its decisions are influenced by U.S. economic pressure, the release could be a sign of its willingness to make concessions in order to de-escalate tensions with Washington, which often criticizes its arbitrary detention of political prisoners. Â
The Cuban government did not specify who it would release, but said that the prisoners selected âhave all served a significant part of their sentence and have maintained good conduct in prisonâ.Â
This is not the first time that Havana has released prisoners to soften relations with Washington. In early 2025 the Cuban government granted over 500 prisoners early release in accordance with the terms of a deal between the Miguel DĂaz-Canel and Joe Biden administrations.
In return, Biden removed Cuba from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism just days before his term ended. Cuba was, however, redesignated a state sponsor of terrorism immediately after Donald Trump came to power; the prisoners were released regardless.Â
The 2025 deal was also brokered by the Vatican, highlighting the traditional importance of the papal state as a mediator between the two nations.Â
The Vatican appears to have adopted this role of interlocutor again, as Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Parolin stated earlier this week that the ânecessary stepsâ had been taken to ensure a ânegotiated solutionâ between the two adversaries.Â
In the context of current tensions, Pope Leo XIV called for Cuba and the U.S. to engage in âsincere dialogueâ to âavoid violenceâ in early February and recently held talks with Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno RodrĂguez Parrilla.Â
The top U.S. diplomat in Cuba â Chief of Mission Mike Hammer â also met with a representative of the Holy See to discuss the âdeteriorating situation in Cubaâ.Â
Read more: Cuba, U.S. reportedly âtalkingâ as Pope calls for de-escalation of tensions
âHistorically, [the Vaticanâs role] has been important because in Cuba the Catholic Church has remained a presence more than in most other communist countries, certainly more than in [Soviet] Russia,â Professor Massimo Faggioli, a professor of ecclesiology at Trinity College Dublin and a Vatican specialist, told Latin America ReportsÂ
Although that âhistory of coexistenceâ has been âdifficultâ â religious celebrations were once banned on the island and the Cuban Communist Party seized Church property after coming to power â the Churchâs continued existence in Cuba has meant that âall popes since John Paul II have had some kind of relationship with the Cuban leadership, to the dismay of the Americansâ.
That relationship has become more important as the Vatican now, according to the Professor, perceives âa clearer threatâ on the part of the United States âto do something about Cubaâ and its communist regime in the wake of the Venezuelan and Iranian operations.
The Vaticanâs âtraditional approach to international relations ⊠based on multilateralism, on the role of international organizations, on the rule of lawâ means that the Holy See finds itself âat oddsâ with the current American policy of potentially destabilizing unilateral regime change operations. This, in turn, has led it to push âto prevent the escalationâ of the U.S.-Cuba tensions into a military conflict, Faggioli argued. Â
The Vatican has historically been successful in mediating difficult negotiations between adversaries, the ecclesiologist pointed out, because their representatives engage in diplomacy as a âservice to the Churchâ borne from faith and therefore tend to be less career-oriented.
Furthermore, the Vaticanâs experience in mediating conflicts worldwide means âthere is a treasure of knowledge and of relationships and of connectionsâ within the papal diplomatic corps, which operates âin every part of the worldâ. Â
Although Faggioli suggested that some senior figures in the American administration â such as the Catholic Marco Rubio and Trump himself â may not be the most amenable to the Vaticanâs overtures, he also recognized that âthere are some voices in the U.S. Department of State that are more cautious than ⊠[those] in the cabinet of Donald Trumpâ and might represent âdifferent views when they talk with the Vaticanâ.Â
With todayâs official confirmation of ongoing Cuba-U.S. negotiations by Cuban President Miguel DĂaz-Canel, perhaps the Vatican will be called upon to act as intermediary between the two adversaries once again.Â
Featured Image: The current Pope Leo XIV. He is the first American-born Pope and has called for de-escalation between his country of birth and Cuba.Â
Image Credit: Edgar BeltrĂĄn via Wikimedia Commons
License: Creative Commons Licenses
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Machado rallies thousands of Venezuelans in Chile as Kast quickly clamps down on migration
Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner MarĂa Corina Machado greeted Thursday 17,000 Venezuelans in the streets of Santiago, Chile.Â
âSantiago is overflowing with us, my Venezuelans!,â she told the crowd as they shouted âMaria Presidente,â spilling out from downtown Parque Almagro in a sea of Venezuelan flags.
Earlier, hundreds of well wishers had gathered in Plaza de Armas to welcome Machado as she was awarded the keys to the city by the Santiago mayor. There, she hugged and took selfies with well-wishers. Later, in the march, she embraced members of the crowd, inviting two children to join her on the stage and wave to the thousands lining the streets.Â
The march, which the police had planned to be attended by 4,000, was the largest public demonstration attended by Machado since she left Venezuela in December. After leaving the event, Machado said it was âindescribableâ on social media.Â
âToday our clear path is to move forward so that all those who have been forced to leave their country can travel back to reunite with their families with their heads held high,â Machado said.Â
Chile is home to the fourth largest Venezuelan diaspora in Latin America with almost 700,000 Venezuelan nationals living there, 42% of the foreign-born Chilean population. Of the illegal migrants living in Chile, 75% are Venezuelan, according to figures from the Liberty and Development think tank.Â
Exploiting these figures was central to new President JosĂ© Antonio Kastâs successful presidential campaign. He promised to expel thousands of illegal migrants living in Chile. In his inaugural address Wednesday, he said he had already ordered the military to build a physical barrier along the border with Bolivia, a regular crossing for migrants arriving on foot.Â
In his first day in office, Kast launched the Shield Frontier Plan, a strategy for erecting walls five meters in height equipped with motion sensors, facial recognition and infrared cameras. The plan also includes funding for surveillance drones along Chileâs northern borders.
As violent and petty crime has risen in recent years, the Centre for Public Studies says seven in ten Chileans âstrongly agreeâ that illegal immigration is driving insecurity.Â
Kast, his followers and other members of his party have, in their discourse against migration, publicly targeted the Venezuelan diaspora. In January, Kast singled out Venezuelans on Canal 5 Noticias, saying illegal Venezuelansâ âdays were numberedâ as he promised an unprecedented ramp up of deportation orders. After his election victory, he repeatedly called on Venezuelans to remove themselves from Chile before he took power.Â
Machado, who was in Chile for Kastâs inauguration, said in a statement that the Venezuelans living in Chile were âdecent people.â
âWhat we are doing here today is asking all Chileans â and all Latin Americans â to help us ensure that every Venezuelan can return with dignity and freedom to the country they adore,â she added.
Read more: JosĂ© Antonio Kast becomes Chileâs first hard-right president since dictatorship Â
Striking a similar tone to Kast, U.S. President Donald Trump has vilified Venezuelanâs living in the U.S., tying them to the international criminal organization, one the U.S. labels terrorist, the Tren de Aragua. Since taking office, Trump has said Venezuelans linked to the gang were âinvadingâ the U.S.
Machado, who gifted her Nobel Peace Prize medal to Trump in January following the U.S. capture of NicolĂĄs Maduro, said in a video address Thursday that Trump remained a âfundamental allyâ to Venezuela.
Trump had earlier questioned Machadoâs suitability to lead, citing (misleading) low approval ratings. Trump has also praised Venezuelaâs interim president and Maduroâs former vice president, who is widely disliked by Venezuelans.
As tension between the Venezuelan diaspora and the new hardline government bubble in Chile, Machado tread a fine line, telling reporters that she had not yet discussed with Kast how Chile can support Venezuelanâs who have fled the country.
Featured Image: Thousands gather in the streets of Santiago, Chile with Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado
Image credit: Maria Corina Machado via X
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What To Expect When Visiting Panama: A Travelerâs Guide

News Americas, MIAMI, FL, Fri. Mar. 13, 2026: If Panama fascinates you because of its history, its role as a global financial hub and its reputation as a kind of âLittle Dubaiâ of Central America, then a weekend visit can offer a mix of modern skyline, cultural heritage and rainforest adventure.

I recently flew from Miami to Tocumen International Airport in Panama City to celebrate my auntâs 70th birthday. Three generations of women made the trip, and as the planner for our group of 11, I spent weeks researching what to expect.
Some things were exactly as advertised. Others were not.
Hereâs what surprised me â and what travelers should know before visiting Panama.

The first surprise came immediately after landing.
Tocumen International Airport is far larger than many Caribbean airports, with long corridors lined with duty-free shops leading to immigration. The biometric immigration process, however, was unexpectedly intense. Each visitor must place every finger on a scanning machine for fingerprinting before being photographed.
It was hardly the warm Caribbean-style welcome one might hope for.
Outside the terminal, our group was supposed to meet a driver arranged through our travel agent. Instead of a clearly identified driver, we eventually located a man holding a small âFunjetâ sign â after some confusion and translation help from an airport employee assisting my aunt.
The language barrier was our first real challenge in Panama. English is spoken in tourist areas, but it is far from universal.
Once our luggage was loaded, we began the 30-minute drive into Panama City.
Panama Cityâs skyline is impressive.
Towering glass buildings stretch along the coastline, giving the city a visual blend of Miami, Chicago and Dubai. Some buildings even feature gold-tinted glass designed to reflect sunlight â a signature style seen in Middle Eastern cities.

Our hotel, the Renaissance Panama City Hotel in the El Cangrejo district, offered a comfortable base for exploring the city. While check-in was slower than expected, the staff were welcoming and helpful.
After a long day of travel, our group walked to a nearby restaurant for dinner. Communication with the staff required a mix of basic Spanish, limited English and plenty of pointing at menu items.
Still, hunger makes everything taste better.
A seafood rice dish paired with Panamaâs local Balboa beer was enough to end the day on a good note.

No visit to Panama would be complete without seeing the Panama Canal.
The Miraflores Visitor Center, about 20 minutes from the city, provides one of the best vantage points to watch ships pass through the famous locks. Tickets cost about $17.50 and include access to an IMAX documentary narrated by Morgan Freeman.

But the real attraction is the observation deck. Standing there watching a massive cargo ship slowly rise as the lock fills with water is an unforgettable moment. Tugboats guide the ships carefully into place as gates open and close, allowing vessels to move between ocean levels.
Seeing the engineering process up close is breathtaking â especially knowing that thousands of Caribbean laborers helped build the canal more than a century ago. Their sweat and sacrifice are part of this monumental achievement.
A cultural dining experience is En La Fonda based on its cultural shows and the local food on the menu. The energy here is amazing and Ms. Poulette, the restaurantâs owner is a phenomenal woman, assisted by her parrot. The dĂ©cor is very cultural and historical and includes a carnival costume, a painted bus Infront where you can pose for pictures, a boat with a replica Jack Sparrow and hats and old cultural artifacts that as West Indians you identified with â including the old draws in the bathroom and the bleach bottle as a pipe head. We were enthused by the drinks including the Red Devil â a mixture of hibiscus or sorrel, a Caribbean heritage mix.


Another highlight of our trip was visiting an EmberĂĄ indigenous village located within the rainforest of Chagres National Park.

After a 40-minute drive from the city, visitors board motorized canoes that travel along the Chagres River deep into the rainforest.
The journey itself is stunning Towering jungle trees line the riverbanks while birds and wildlife occasionally appear overhead. The stillness of the rainforest contrasts sharply with the energy of Panama City.

At the village, we were welcomed with traditional drumming, dancing and music â one of the warmest greetings we experienced during the entire trip.

Local families sell handmade crafts to support their community, and visitors are served lunch wrapped in banana leaves.

Our meal included freshly fried tilapia and crispy plantains, followed by freshly cut tropical fruits. It was one of the most memorable meals of the weekend.
Back in the city, Panamaâs historic district, Casco Antiguo, offers a completely different atmosphere. Cobblestone streets, colonial architecture, small shops and rooftop bars create a vibrant nightlife scene including at En La Fonda.

The Metropolitan Cathedral is a must-visit, and sunset views from rooftop restaurants are spectacular.

One of our best dining experiences came at Kobore, a Caribbean-inspired restaurant known for seafood dishes served in coconut sauces. The mahi-mahi with coconut rice was exceptional.


Our final day included a hike in the Metropolitan City Park and dinner took place along the Amador Causeway â a waterfront promenade built using material excavated during the construction of the Panama Canal.

The area is lively, with restaurants, music and families enjoying the waterfront views. Dinner for me was prawns in coconut milk served with coconut rice and â naturally â another Balboa beer.
It was the perfect ending to the trip.
Panama offers an intriguing mix of modern city life, historic neighborhoods, rainforest adventure and rich cultural traditions. But travelers should also be prepared for language barriers, traffic and the occasional logistical hiccup.
Despite the challenges, the Panama Canal and the visit to the EmberĂĄ village made the journey worthwhile. Some places leave impressions that linger long after the trip ends.
For me, Panamaâs canal and rainforest will always be among them.
EDITORâS NOTE: Felicia J. Persaud is CEO of Invest Caribbean and AI Capital Exchange and founder of NewsAmericasNow.com.
Petro sends ministers to Caracas after meeting with Delcy RodrĂguez is called off
Colombia and Venezuela shifted their planned bilateral contact to the ministerial level on Friday after a presidential meeting announced for the border was abruptly canceled under the formula of âforce majeure.â Instead of the face-to-face encounter scheduled between Gustavo Petro and Delcy RodrĂguez at the Atanasio Girardot bridge, BogotĂĄ sent a delegation to Caracas led by Foreign Minister Rosa Villavicencio and including the ministers of defense, trade, and mines and energy.
Belize Jungle and Beach Packages for a Varied Vacation
After a morning session of birdwatching then a hearty breakfast, I hiked through jungle foliage to a waterfall. The next day we rappelled down the face of it from the summit, then went ziplining from a tower in the afternoon. Day Three onward was completely different though: we were kayaking through the warm waters...
The post Belize Jungle and Beach Packages for a Varied Vacation appeared first on Luxury Latin America Blog.
Between Giants: How Uruguay Is Expanding Its Global Trade Strategy
By Juan A. Bogliaccini, Professor of Political Science, Universidad CatĂłlica del Uruguay
This small South American country is seeking new markets and investment while remaining anchored to MERCOSUR and balancing ties with the United States and China.
For more than three decades, Uruguayâs strategy for international economic integration has revolved around the Southern Common Market, MERCOSUR. Founded in 1991 by Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay, the bloc emerged at the end of the Cold War with the goal of deepening regional economic integration and strengthening trade among its members. For Uruguay, a small country of just over three million people located between two regional giants, the bloc initially proved highly beneficial. During the 1990s, MERCOSUR became the main engine of Uruguayan exports and foreign investment.
That dynamic began to shift at the end of the decade. Brazilâs currency devaluation in 1998 and Argentinaâs financial collapse in 2001 exposed the vulnerabilities of Uruguayâs economic dependence on its neighbors. At the time, a majority of the countryâs exports was destined for these two markets, and the crises had profound effects on Uruguayâs economy.
These events triggered a long-running debate within the countryâs political and economic elites about the future of Uruguayâs international trade strategy. At the center of the discussion was one of MERCOSURâs key institutional rules: member states cannot negotiate individual free trade agreements outside the bloc. Critics argued that this constraint limited Uruguayâs ability to diversify its economic partnerships in an increasingly globalized world.
For many years, much of the political center-right advocated a strategy similar to that pursued by Chileâsigning bilateral free trade agreements across multiple regions of the world. The center-left generally defended remaining firmly within the regional framework, emphasizing the importance of political and economic integration with neighboring countries.
Over time, however, both sides gradually converged toward a more pragmatic position. Today there is broad consensus that Uruguay should remain in MERCOSUR while pushing for greater flexibility within the bloc allowing for members to pursue complementary trade agreements. In practice, leaving MERCOSUR has never been a realistic option. Brazil and Argentina remain crucial trading partners, particularly for exports linked to regional value chains and cross-border production networks.
At the same time, the bloc itself has increasingly sought to expand outward. In recent years, MERCOSUR has concluded trade agreements with Singapore and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), which includes Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland. In 2026, after more than twenty-five years of negotiations, MERCOSUR also finalized a landmark trade agreement with the European Union. Across successive governments representing different political parties, Uruguay has consistently supported these negotiations as part of a long-term strategy of gradual trade opening.
Meanwhile, Uruguayâs broader trade relationships have evolved significantly. Over the past two decades, China has become the countryâs principal destination for goods exports, particularly agricultural commodities such as soybeans and forestry products like cellulose pulp. At the same time, the United States has become the main market for Uruguayâs rapidly growing service sector, especially software development and business services.
These trends have positioned Uruguay within a complex global landscape shaped by growing geopolitical competition between the worldâs two largest economies. Rather than aligning strongly with either side, successive Uruguayan governments have sought to maintain a careful balance between Washington and Beijing while preserving strong ties with their regional partners.
Recent administrations have also attempted to broaden the countryâs commercial horizons. During the presidency of Luis Lacalle Pou (2020â2025), Uruguay applied to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), one of the worldâs most significant multilateral trade agreements. Although accession negotiations are only beginning, the move signaled Uruguayâs intention to deepen economic ties with Asia-Pacific markets.
The Lacalle Pou government also explored the possibility of negotiating a bilateral free trade agreement with China. While the initiative ultimately did not move forwardâlargely because Beijing made clear it preferred negotiations with MERCOSUR as a wholeâthe effort served an important political purpose. Alongside the negotiations with the CPTPP, it signaled to Uruguayâs regional partners that the country was determined to pursue broader trade opportunities.
The current administration of President YamandĂș Orsi has continued this strategy of balanced engagement. Diplomatic outreach to both the United States and China reflects Uruguayâs pragmatic approach in an increasingly multipolar global economy. Promoting exports has become particularly important as the strength of the Uruguayan peso makes international competitiveness more challenging for domestic producers.
Despite these global ambitions, Uruguayâs integration into international value chains remains heavily regional. Much of the countryâs participation in global trade occurs through âimport-to-exportâ production models, particularly in agro-industrial sectors that rely on imported inputs and regional processing networks. A large share of these exports continues to be destined for MERCOSUR markets, reflecting the enduring importance of regional economic integration.
This structural reality explains why Uruguayâs leaders have consistently pursued a dual strategy: maintaining strong economic ties with Argentina and Brazil while simultaneously seeking new markets and investment partners around the world.
The recently concluded trade agreement between MERCOSUR and the European Union may represent an important step in that direction. Together with the agreements with Singapore and EFTAâand the expected accession of Bolivia to MERCOSURâthe deal could gradually expand the economic horizons of a country that remains heavily dependent on a limited number of export sectors.
For Uruguay, the stakes are significant. Since the end of the global commodity boom in the early 2010s, economic growth has slowed. As a result, it has become more difficult to reduce a fiscal deficit that hovers around 4 percent of GDP while public debt continues to rise gradually. Expanding exports and attracting foreign investment have therefore become central priorities for policymakers.
Yet Uruguayâs small domestic market inevitably limits its appeal to international investors. The countryâs greatest economic asset lies instead in its potential role as a stable regional hub within the much larger South American market. With strong institutions, political stability, and relatively high levels of human capital, Uruguay often presents itself as a reliable gateway for companies seeking access to the region.
Realizing that potential, however, will require more than trade agreements alone. Expanding Uruguayâs global economic presence will depend on developing new productive sectors, increasing productivity in existing industries, and moving gradually toward exports with higher value added.
For a small country navigating between two regional giants and competing global powers, this is no simple task. But Uruguayâs strategy remains clear: maintain its regional anchor while steadily expanding its reach into the global economy.
Lula withdraws from Kast inauguration amid presence of FlĂĄvio Bolsonaro
Brazilian President Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva has canceled a planned trip to Chile to attend JosĂ© Antonio Kastâs inauguration on Wednesday and will instead be represented at the ceremony by Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira. Brazilian officials said the change was due to âscheduling reasons.â
MarĂa Corina Machado arrives in Chile for Kastâs inauguration and meeting with Venezuelan migrants
Venezuelan opposition leader MarĂa Corina Machado has arrived in Chile to attend Wednesdayâs ceremony in which Gabriel Boric will hand over the presidency to JosĂ© Antonio Kast, in a visit that also includes an event with Venezuelan residents in Santiago and several public appearances in the capital. She is among the international guests invited to the transfer of power, where Kast will formally take office at Congress in ValparaĂso.
Costa Rica 2026: Political Continuity and Signs of Democratic Erosion
By Ilka Treminio-SĂĄnchez, Political Scientist of the University of Costa Rica. Â
The national elections held in Costa Rica on February 1, 2026, marked a turning point in the countryâs recent political trajectory. Contrary to expectations of a runoffâcommon in a highly fragmented party systemâthe ruling party candidate, Laura FernĂĄndez, won in the first round with 48.3 percent of votes counted. This result not only ensured the continuity of the political project championed by President Rodrigo Chaves but also consolidated a deeper transformation of the Costa Rican political system.Â
The election saw a 69 percent voter turnout, the highest since 2010. This increase can be interpreted as a sign of civic revitalization, but also as a consequence of growing polarization. During the campaign, two distinct blocs emerged: on one side, the ruling party, organized around Chavesâs personalistic leadership; on the other, a fragmented opposition that, despite its ideological differences, shared concerns about the countryâs institutional direction, and which ultimately consolidated most of its votes around the National Liberation Party. In the run up to the election, supporters of traditional and emerging parties came together. Concerned about the countryâs democracy, they spontaneously organized various forms of collective action outside event venues. These activities culminated in the so-called âmulticolored caravans,â named for the diversity of party flags displayed under the unifying slogan: âOut with Chaves!â But, despite such mobilizations, and in line with poll results, the opposition did not advance to a runoff.Â
From an organizational standpoint, the process was impeccable. The Supreme Electoral Tribunal once again demonstrated high standards of transparency and efficiency, reaffirming the technical soundness of the Costa Rican electoral system. However, this procedural strength contrasts sharply with the political tensions that accumulated during Chavesâs presidency, characterized by a confrontational discourse toward oversight bodies and the judiciary.Â
The Ruling Party and the Construction of ContinuityÂ
FernĂĄndezâs victory cannot be understood without considering the central role of the outgoing president. Although constitutionally barred from immediate reelection, Chaves devised a succession strategy based on personal loyalty and the symbolic transfer of his leadership. The official campaign revolved around the slogan âcontinuity of change,â presenting FernĂĄndez as the custodian of the presidentâs political mandate and as its guarantor of continued power.Â
The electoral vehicle was the Sovereign Peopleâs Party (PPSO), created after Chaves fell out with the leadership of the Social Democratic Progress Party, with which he rose to power in 2022. The reorganization allowed it to concentrate the vote and achieve not only the presidency, but also 31 of the 57 legislative seats, an absolute majority unprecedented in recent decades.Â
This result substantially alters the conditions for governance. While previous administrations had to govern with small and fragmented factions, the new government will have a robust parliamentary group, although of late some friction has emerged among its leaders. Nevertheless, only the National Liberation Party â historically the most dominant political force in Costa Rica â had achieved a similar number of representatives in 1982, during an exceptional economic crisis.Â
This legislative majority opens the door to the possibility of far-reaching political reforms. During his presidency, Chaves repeatedly expressed interest in expanding the executive branchâs powers, limiting oversight bodiesâ authority, and promoting a transformation of the state that his supporters call the âThird Republic,â a successive step in the destruction of the Second Republic inherited after the 1948 Civil War, whose foundations were laid by the liberationist JosĂ© Figueres Ferrer. Without a supermajority, such reforms were not feasible. Today, the balance of power looks different.Â
During the transition period, two unprecedented decisions were announced. First, the president-elect expressed her intention to appoint Rodrigo Chaves as Minister of the Presidency, the sole responsible for coordinating actions between the executive and legislative branches. Second, the outgoing president appointed Laura FernĂĄndez as Minister of the Presidency for the remaining months of the administration. Chaves also stated that, in his future role, he would seek to bring on board members of the National Liberation Party to form the supermajority necessary to approve constitutional reforms.
Populism, Leadership, and Institutional TensionsÂ
Rodrigo Chavesâs governing style represented a break with traditional Costa Rican political patterns. His confrontational rhetoric, directed against media outlets, public universities, judges, and opposition members of parliament, reinforced an anti-establishment narrative that resonated with sectors disillusioned with the status quo.  His rhetoric fits into the political model followed by other populist presidents on the continent.Â
Surveys conducted by the Center for Political Research and Studies (CIEP) at the University of Costa Rica showed that his supporters primarily valued his ability to âimpose orderâ and âproduce results.â These attributes reflect a social demand for strong leadership and swift decisions, even if such an approach creates tension with the deliberative procedures inherent in liberal democracy.Â
In this sense, the Costa Rican case fits into a broader regional trend. The political and inspirational affinity with Salvadorian President Nayib Bukeleâs influence was evident throughout the campaign, particularly regarding public safety and proposals to toughen the prison system. Likewise, the first congratulatory messages to FernĂĄndez came from far-right figures such as Chilean president-elect Antonio Kast, and Mexican media figure Eduardo VerĂĄstegui, suggesting the integration of Costa Ricaâs new leadership into transnational conservative-right networks. This realignment does not necessarily imply a break with traditional partners, but it does signal an ideological shift that redefines the countryâs international standing.Â
Security, Social Cohesion, and a Democratic FutureÂ
The new governmentâs main challenge will be public security. The sustained increase in homicides and expansion of organized crime have eroded Costa Ricaâs reputation as a peaceful exception in Central America. Policies implemented so far have been lax and ineffective, to the point that candidates labeled them permissive during the campaign debates.Â
Added to this are structural problems: the deterioration of the education system, the strain on the healthcare system, and the weakening of environmental policies that historically formed part of a national consensus. These issues not only affect social well-being but also undermine the legitimacy of a democratic system seemingly unable to improve the situation.Â
The 2026 elections do not simply represent a change or continuity of political parties. They reflect a reconfiguration of the political system around a personalistic leadership that combines right-wing populism, social conservatism, an evangelical agenda, and challenges to institutional checks and balances. The electoral strength of the ruling party is undeniable; so too is the broad-based support it received.Â
The underlying concern is undoubtedly that the new continuity government could further the trajectory of democratic erosion. When anti-institutional rhetoric is legitimized by those in power and the political concentration of that power is presented as a condition for effective governance, the risk is not an abrupt collapse but rather an incremental erosion.Â
For a society with a long tradition of stability and the rule of law, the central challenge will be to rebuild a minimal consensus around respect for horizontal checks and balances and pluralistic deliberation. The continuity of Chavesâs political project opens a new cycle. Its outcome will depend not only on the Executive and its legislative majority, but also on the capacity of the citizenry and institutions to maintain the balances that have historically defined Costa Rican democracy.Â
Re-imagining the Americas Through Culture Amid an Increasingly Fragmented Hemisphere
Source:Â Wikimedia Commons
By Felipe Rezende, Research Fellow and Visiting Scholar in Residence at American Universityâs Center for Latin American and Latino Studies (AU-CLALS), from the University of BrasĂlia (UnB), Brazil.Â
In the current context of jingoistic nationalisms and divisive political projects, particularly in the United States, where the current Trump administration has intensified a political agenda anchored in anti-immigration discourse and practices, reflecting upon the challenges and opportunities for re-imagining what people across the Americaâs might have in common, in terms of identity, culture and shared belong, is at present particularly important. Contemporary cultural developments such as Bad Bunnyâs performance at the Super Bowl LX and Brazilâs global awarded film industry illustrate how notions of âAmericanâ belonging can also be culturally and politically contentious.
Hemispheric Myths of National Assimilation
At first glance, imagining a unitary cultural identity across the Americas appears challenging. Although Latin American nation-states might share similar colonial and post-colonial histories, their different national and subnational cultural commitments have also been forged in dynamic relation with cultural assets from elsewhere influencing what is now recognized as latino culture. Similarly, the idea of a North American identity does not emerge as an empirically verifiable cultural synthesis, but rather as the contingent result of ongoing symbolic disputes marked by racial hierarchies, power asymmetries, and competing projects of belonging.
Mid-twentieth century notions such as the melting pot in the United and the myth of the so-called cosmic race or mestizaje in Latin America, offer different but comparable assimilationist narratives for the nation, narratives which obscure persistent structural conflicts within post-colonial American societies. Such accounts function largely as ideological constructs aimed at producing one or another sort of unified national identity. In this sense, contemporary debates about pluri- or multiculturalism in the Americas carry an inherent ambiguity: cultural diversity is recognized rhetorically but also regulated through mechanisms that posit and reproduce racial and other social asymmetries.
This multicultural dilemma in the Americas, therefore, derives from the tension between the political recognition of plural identities, on the one hand, and the impulse to preserve national identity as previously imagined, on the other. In this context, artistic and cultural production and its diffusion emerge as privileged arenas of symbolic mediation, contestation of meaning, and negotiation of belonging, which often seek to transcend closed assumptions of national identity. We might understand the hemispheric and global diffusion of national artistic production from Latin American countries as more than just cultural industry content, and as helping to circulate diverse cultural perspectives.
Latin American Pop Culture is Having a Moment
Recently, numerous products of Latin American popular culture have achieved global recognition, potentially serving as pillars for re-imagining a broader and more cohesive sense of identity across the Americas, and in ways increasingly independent from taken-for-granted nationalist mythologies across the continent. Especially in times of growing international fragmentation, authoritarian threats to democratic systems, and dysfunctional global regimes that fail to produce international cooperation the cases below illustrate new opportunities for re-imagining identity, culture, and belonging in the Americas.
In recent years musical artists like the Colombian Karol G and Puerto Rican Bad Bunny have come to exemplify the consolidation of Latin urban pop as a transnational cultural phenomenon, with a strong presence in the global music industry and recurring visibility through numerous nominations and awards in the GRAMMY and Latin GRAMMY circuits. Bad Bunny won the 68th GRAMMY Awards in the following categories: Best MĂșsica Urbana Album and Best Album Cover, for DeBĂ TiRAR MĂĄS FotoS, and Best Global Music Performance for EoO. Also, his 2026 Super Bowl LX halftime performance made history as the first solo Latino artist to headline the show, bringing renewed attention to discussions about what it means to be âAmerican.â
Also in music, Liniker, a Black Brazilian trans woman songwriter, won three categories at the 26th Latin GRAMMY Awards: Best Portuguese-Language Contemporary Pop Album, and Portuguese-Language Urban Performance for Caju, as well as Best Portuguese-Language Song for Veludo Marrom. In addition, the album Milton + esperanza (2024), a collaboration between the acclaimed North American jazz artist Esperanza Spalding and the Brazilian master Milton Nascimento, was nominated for the 67th GRAMMY Award in the category Best Jazz Vocal Album.
In cinema, Brazilian audiovisual productions have undeniably entered the global mainstream, particularly through films addressing the memory of political tragedies such as that countryâs military dictatorship. âIâm Still Hereâ (2024) won the 2025 Academy Award for Best International Feature Film, the 2025 Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Motion Picture â Drama (Fernanda Torres), and more than 70 additional international awards. âThe Secret Agentâ(2025) won Best Director (Kleber Mendonça Filho) and Best Actor (Wagner Moura) at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, and later won the 2026 Golden Globe for Best Non-English Language Film and Best Actor in a Motion Picture â Drama (Wagner Moura). The film is also nominated for the 2026 Academy Awards in the categories Best Picture, Best Actor, Best International Feature Film, and Achievement in Casting.
In literature, the growing presence of Latin American authors within global circuits of recognition can also be observed through the wider international circulation of their books, increasing number of translations, and their selection for prestigious literary prizes. For example, the Brazilian novelist Itamar Vieira Junior, author of Torto Arado (2019), saw the 2023 English translation shortlisted for the 2024 International Booker Prize.
Each Latin American cultural producer mentioned here successfully transformed historically localized experiences â often addressing political violence, state terrorism, racism, and patriarchy, among other challenging topics â into aesthetically communicable narratives accessible at a transnational scale. But it is important to note that these recent successes in music, film and literature cannot be explained solely by the artistic genius of their creators. Beyond their evident creative excellence, also important has been the existence of public policies supporting the production and diffusion of national cultural assets, which have also contributed to the international success of Latin American popular culture.
Take the case of Brazil, which put in place a set of public policies that directly incentivize and support contributions to the countryâs cultural economy. These include the so-called Rouanet Law, providing tax incentives to support the completion and circulation cultural projects. In the audiovisual field specifically, the Audiovisual Sector Fund (FSA) ensures public resources for film production and distribution. They also include the National Aldir Blanc Policy (PNAB), which established a continuous and decentralized state-funding model strengthening cultural infrastructure and expanding access to cultural rights at the local level. The international reach of works such as âIâm Still Hereâ (2024) and âThe Secret Agentâ (2025) should also be understood as the result of a public infrastructure that sustains the competitiveness and global insertion of Brazilian audiovisual products.
What Hemispheric Cultural Diplomacy Has to Offer
Whether through voluntary cultural cooperation, institutional support from domestic cultural public policies, or efforts of public and cultural diplomacy, the growing presence of Latin American artistic production in the hemisphere is neither accidental nor merely the result of its exoticization by Global North audiences. Despite long-standing legacies of stereotyping and archetypal representations of Latin American peoples and cultures, contemporary Latin American cultural products, which circulate throughout the hemisphere and beyond, help us to reconfigure the hemisphereâs identity in new and pluricultural ways.
Even amid the challenges posed by a context of fragmentation, competition, and new threats of geopolitical violence, the aesthetic innovations and moral premises foregrounded by contemporary Latin American artists, and informed by expressions of human rights, peaceful coexistence, and American belonging, present rich opportunities for new imaginaries of hemispheric identity and culture. In this sense, imagining what people across the Americas might have in common can cease to be just an idealistic abstraction and become one critical horizon for revitalizing mutual respect and democratic coexistence in the hemisphere.
Ron La Gloria Rum From Veracruz, Mexico
Since Iâm based in Mexico and the country seems to grow lots of sugar cane, it has been a mystery to me why they donât produce more rum. So when I see a Mexican rum brand on the shelf I donât recognize, I almost always buy it. So when I saw Ron La Gloria...
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The Pantanal hotspot of Biodiversity
The Pantanal is a land of superlatives. The largest tropical wetland in the world. A biodiversity hot spot. Home to South Americaâs âBig Fiveâ: Jaguar, Giant Anteater, Giant River Otter, Maned Wolf & Brazilian Tapir. Not to mention the Pantaneira culture, shaped by an unforgiving landscape. What the floodplain landscape lacks in elevation it holds [âŠ]
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Download These Travel Apps Before Your Latin America Trip
Youâve bought your plane ticket, booked your hotels, lined up tours, and youâll be heading to a country in Latin America on vacation. Great! Youâre not quite done yet though. Make sure youâre prepared for what can go wrong along the way by getting a few extra travel apps on your phone or laptop....
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Does the Trump Administration Really Believe People are so Brainless?
In the face of Trumpâs steady decline in approval ratings, White House spokesman Davis Ingle claimed: âThe ultimate poll was November 5th 2024 when nearly 80 million Americans overwhelmingly elected President Trump to deliver on his popular and commonsense agenda.â OVERWHELMINGLY? Trump received under 50% of the popular vote and only 1.5% more than Kamala Harris. Does that make his triumph âoverwhelming?â Of course not, but that doesnât deter Trump and his allies from constantly conflating the popular vote and the electoral college vote in order to claim that 2024 was a landslide victory.
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Venezuela offers Amnesty and pardon for Political Prisoners
MĂ©rida, February 23, 2026 (venezuelanalysis.com) â The Venezuelan National Assembly passed the Amnesty Law for Democratic Coexistence on Thursday, January 19. The government, led by Acting President Delcy RodrĂguez, immediately enacted the legislation and presented it as a step toward âpeace and tolerance.â The law establishes mechanisms that aim to promote political reconciliation through a [âŠ]
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No Kings Rally is Building Momentum but Needs to Raise the Issue of Washington's War Mongering
Momentum is building for the March 28 massive nation-wide No Kings rally. But as reflected in this sign âNo War on Venezuela,â the protests should focus as much on the aggressive regime-change moves by the U.S. and the resultant death and destruction, as on issues on the domestic front. These photos are from todayâs protest in Germantown MD, which are taking place every Saturday and are getting positive, enthusiastic responses from cars passing by at this busy intersection.Â
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The Illusion of Progress? The Rise of Women in Ecuadorian Politics Despite Ongoing Gender Violence in Its Indigenous Communities
(Source:Â Wikimedia Commons)
By Isabella Serra & S. Shrestha Â
On January 24, 2006, Estuardo Remache was criminally charged with domestic violence and removed from his position as head of Ecuadorâs Human Rights Commission. The case was brought forward by his wife, Maria Lucrecia Nono, who had spent years seeking justice for the repeated abuse she endured. On numerous occasions Mariaâs attempts to report the violence were dismissed, her credibility questioned, and her intentions painted as vindictive.
When Maria first turned to local authorities and ComisarĂas, state-run womenâs centers meant to support survivors of gender-based violence (GBV), she was told her case was a personal matter to be resolved at home. Officials cited Article 191 of the Ecuadorian Constitution, which separates the federal and Indigenous legal systems, and told her she must seek justice within her own Kichwa community.Â
Gender-based violence, which includes emotional, physical, and sexual harm rooted in gender inequality, is a widespread and deeply structural form of oppression. Mariaâs abuse didnât stop at home; it was reinforced by the very institutions intended to protect her. Each time she sought help, she was met with indifference, disbelief, or outright rejection, despite returning with visible bruises and ongoing emotional trauma. Her story points to a more systemic issue: the absence of female political power in Ecuador to challenge and transform these injustices.Â
Mariaâs ordeal highlights a troubling paradox: the greater presence of women â particularly Indigenous Kichwa women â in Ecuadorâs political sphere, alongside the continued high rates of GBV in their communities. Why, despite growing political representation for women, does gender-based violence remain so entrenched, especially among Indigenous communities?
 Legal and Structural ContextÂ
Ecuadorâs 2008 Constitution marked a turning point, officially recognizing the country as plurinational and intercultural, thus legitimizing Indigenous governance structures alongside the national legal system. Yet this dual system has limitations. While intended to acknowledge indigenous sovereignty, in practice it often creates conditions of legal marginality, particularly for Indigenous women. In Mariaâs case, the national judiciary abdicated responsibility, claiming the Kichwa system to be the appropriate jurisdiction, while Kichwa authorities sought to silence her to avoid casting their communities in a negative light.Â
This tension reflects a broader legal failure: the promotion of state-sponsored multiculturalism but the failure to protect vulnerable populations within specific communities. The burden of representation falls heavily on Indigenous women like Mirian Masaquiza Jerez, a Kichwa woman staffing the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. In an interview, she explained that any missteps are seen not as individual failings, but as reflections on her entire community. Despite these pressures, her greater visibility, along with that of many others, marks a notable shift in the gendered landscape of Ecuadorian politicsÂ
 Gender-Based Violence in ContextÂ
Ecuador has made substantial progress toward increasing womenâs political representation, thanks in part to gender quotas implemented since the early 2000s. These measures mandate a minimum number of female candidates in national and local elections, enabling more women to ascend to political leadership. Despite recent infighting and a diminished presence in the national legislature, Ecuadorâs Indigenous-led Pachakutik party has played a pivotal role in this shift over the past three decades, advocating for environmental justice and Indigenous rights, including those of women.Â
Yet political representation does not always translate to structural change. The existence of women in positions of power can obscure the continued suffering of those on the margins. Indigenous women in rural areas still live under deeply patriarchal norms, face high rates of GBV, and often lack access to justice, health care, or safe housing. Nearly 6 in 10 women in Ecuador report having experienced GBV. The rate rises to 68 percent among Indigenous women, 10 percentage points higher than among their non-indigenous counterparts. These figures expose the intersectional nature of GBV: it disproportionately affects women who are poor, Indigenous, or otherwise marginalized. GBV is not just a personal issue; it is a societal failure sustained by socioeconomic inequality, cultural norms, and weak legal protections.Â
In many Indigenous communities, patriarchal expectations remain strong. Divorce and contraceptives are taboo, and women who speak out like Maria risk being ostracized by their families and communities. Mariaâs relatives warned her that if she pursued legal action, she might lose custody of her children. And she nearly did: Estuardo Remache was awarded custody of four of their five children before he was convicted.Â
Eco-Politics, Exploitation, and Gendered HarmÂ
The entanglement of environmental exploitation and gender inequality has further exacerbated the issue. Since the 1960s, Ecuadorâs adoption of a free-market model encouraged the expansion of oil extraction in the Amazon. While economically beneficial in the short term, these projects have devastated Indigenous lands and polluted vital resources. The resulting health effects, such as increased miscarriages and birth defects, are disproportionately born by women.Â
Historically oil companies, empowered by deregulation, offered large financial incentives to communities in exchange for land. Communities that resisted remained poor and resource scarce. Those who accommodated faced social stigma, displacement, and environmental degradation. Both paths potentially deepened indigenous poverty.Â
These developments have reshaped gender roles. As men leave to work for the very oil companies that displaced their communities, women are left to manage households, often under increased financial and social stress. This dynamic has continued to entrench patriarchal authority and contributes to higher rates of domestic violence. Workers exposed to exploitative labor, drugs, and alcohol often bring that trauma home. Women, already made vulnerable by poverty and legal liminality, often suffer the consequences.Â
While the 2008 Constitution granted new rights, Ecuadorâs laws have failed to notably improve conditions for indigenous women, and in some cases, have exacerbated hardships. The continued expansion of extractive industries under new hydrocarbons and related environmental laws, has led to further environmental contamination, social disruption, and increased gendered violence.Â
Reassessing âProgressâÂ
After years of litigation, Ecuadorâs Constitutional Court issued a judgment in 2014 finding that MarĂa Lucrecia Nonoâs constitutional rights had been violated. Yet the ruling did not bring closure: the prolonged process left her struggle for justice fundamentally unresolved.
Mariaâs story is often held up as an example of progress, offered as proof that Indigenous women can now access justice. But this interpretation is dangerously reductive. Mariaâs case dragged on for years. She endured physical and emotional abuse, not only from her husband but from a system that refused to believe her. Even after winning she paid a steep price: continued violence, loss of custody, and pressure from Indigenous political leaders urging her to remain silent to protect their image.Â
Her case exposes the limits of symbolic victory. Representation alone is not enough to dismantle cultures of impunity and deeply rooted systems of oppression. Real justice requires the transformation of legal systems, political norms, and economic structures that continue to marginalize Indigenous women.Â
Conclusions Â
Ecuador presents a complex landscape: a country lauded for increasing female political representation, yet plagued by high levels of GBV, especially within Indigenous communities. Maria Lucrecia Nonoâs case is not a victory; it is a warning. It illustrates how cultural recognition, extractive capitalism, and patriarchal power can conspire to silence women, even when they appear to be gaining political stature.Â
The emergence of Indigenous women in Ecuadorâs political sphere is long overdue. But without corresponding reforms in legal protections, community norms, and economic structures, political power will remain largely symbolic. True liberation for Indigenous women in Ecuador will require dismantling the intersecting systems that perpetuate gender-based violence, which requires listening to women like Maria not only when they win, but when they are silenced.Â
Isabella Serra & S. Shrestha  are Research Assistants at The Immigration Lab
*This post continues an ongoing series, as part of CLALSâsâŻEcuador Initiative,âŻexamining the countryâs economic, governance, security, and societal challenges, made possible with generous support fromâŻDr. Maria Donoso Clark, CAS/PhD â91.
The 3 Velas Resorts of Los Cabos
Often when a lodging company has three resorts in one location, theyâre scattered around town in different spots, even if itâs a big brand like Marriott. The Velas Resorts company has a very different situation in Los Cabos though, where their three resorts that appeal to different crowds are all a few minutesâ walk...
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USA demands Venezuela to change Labor Laws, Court & Banking Systems
US President Donald Trump is considering a visit to Venezuela, though he did not specify when the trip might take place or what agenda it would entail. Iâm going to make a visit to Venezuela, Trump told reporters outside the White House on Friday. The US President addressed the press ahead of a trip to [âŠ]
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Trump Recognizes that his Embargo on Cuba Represents a âHumanitarian Threatâ
The U.S. embargo (really a blockade) on Cuba is a âhumanitarian threat.â Those arenât my words. Theyâre Trumpâs very words. Basically, what Trump is saying amounts to this: Someone puts a gun to some elseâs head and tells the person to pull down their pants. He then says, if you donât do what I'm telling you to do, Iâm going to kill you and itâll be your fault.
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Protect Your Personal Data from Cyber Threats in Hotels
Iâm writing this post from a hotel, which is not unusual since Iâm a travel editor. Iâm on an open signal that anyone in the 400+ rooms here can access without a log-in, as can any random person here for a conference, a meal, or a drink. If I opened up my travel itinerary...
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Pam Bondi Shirks Responsibility for Criminal Neglect
Pam Bondi gets the award for coming up with the worst excuse ever made in all of history. At the hearing of the House Judiciary Committee, various Democratic Representatives asked her if she would apologize for the Justic Departmentâs failure to redact names of Jeffrey Epstein victims who were sitting just in back of her. She shouted back at the Democrats asking âhave you apologized for the criminal charges you leveled against the greatest president in U.S. history for supposedly attempting to rig the 2020 presidential elections?â Anybody who doesnât see the pathetic nature of Bondiâs response, let me recommend an undergraduate course in âIntroduction to Logic.â
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Bendito Benito: The Cultural is Always Political
By Ernesto Castañeda
Bad Bunnyâs halftime performance showed how much Latinos love America, even if some parts of America do not love them back. Performed mostly in Spanish, it showed the reality that Latinos and Spanish are part of Americaâs culture: its history, its present, and its future. As the performanceâs references to salsa and Ricky Martinâs participation in it reminded us, Latinosâ contributions to U.S. and global culture are not a new phenomenon.
Performances like this weaken MAGAâs ideological project even without any direct references to the current administration. Most importantly, they are a reminder of what most people can see: that Latinos, Asians, and Africans are part of U.S. communities, schools, labs, and the art and music scenes.
That is why most people in the U.S. were against ICE and mass deportations before the Super Bowl halftime show. But the humanization of Puerto Ricans and brown people could have reached and created empathy or even admiration among some people who were on the fence, do not follow the news, or live in areas with few immigrants.
When Bad Bunny was announced, some said they would boycott, that ICE would be present and carry out mass arrests, that people would not watch the show, or that it would go badly. None of that happened. The hate and fearmongering just made Bad Bunnyâs performance even more special and powerful.
The performanceâs positive message about love and inclusivity is a strong antidote to the fear created by ICE operations and the hatred induced by anti-immigrant, anti-Latino, and anti-black discourse. As a Puerto Rican, Benito Antonio MartĂnez Ocasio, aka Bad Bunny, is a U.S. citizen. However, like many other minorities, on the street, he is racialized and treated as having fewer rights and valid political claims than white citizens who speak English as their first language.
Trusting his team to catch him after he fell backwards from the roof of the casita is a good metaphor for how he knew that Puerto Ricans, Latinos, immigrants, and Americans would have his back, despite the death threats against him that forced him to wear a bulletproof vest during the Grammys ceremony. The community was able to celebrate with him and through him as they watched the Super Bowl during a challenging time. Thus, in his own eyes, his music, lyrics, and his political statements against colonialism, calling Puerto Rica trash, and the dehumanization of people of color and the risks this entails, are worth it.
The halftime show made Latino kids and teenagers feel proud of who they are. It also made many Latinos and non-Latinos, whether they speak Spanish or not, proud of their musical tastes. Some of their parents or grandparents may not have known Bad Bunnyâs music, but his fans are not alone. Bad Bunny recently won the Grammy for Album of the Year. He is the most-streamed artist globally on Spotify and other platforms, and the Super Bowl halftime show was enjoyed by over 130 million live viewers, plus over 80 million replays on the NFL YouTube page. This is as close as any cultural act can come to entering the U.S. and global mainstream.Â
That is why the NFL selected the worldâs leading artist. Bad Bunny is popular worldwide, singing in Spanish. He has no shame about his native language, accent, lingo, or culture. He is proudly Puerto Rican, which makes him emblematic of this multicultural reality.
MAGA proposes that these types of performances threaten US culture. But the USA is stronger than MAGA thinks. It is strong because of its diversity and its mixing of elements from around the world into new, creative products that sell very well.Â
As I told Univision News, soon after Bad Bunny was announced as the performer for Super Bowl LX, and after he had hosted SNL and addressed the controversy the announcement caused, sending ICE to the Super Bowl would not have changed our multicultural reality; though it would have represented the fact that ICE and CBP act as if immigration equals crime. Santa Clara, California, is in the San Francisco Bay Area, where many residents were born abroad and work at Silicon Valleyâs corporations. Thus, it would have been very difficult for ICE to patrol the streets around the Levy Stadium. Furthermore, it would have been economically and politically expensive if a large ICE operation in or around the stadium had caused the Super Bowl to start later or be severely understaffed.Â
When criticized by conservatives for being selected, Bad Bunny defended himself. In doing so, he also indirectly defended other Latinos who are not as famous as he is, but who also contribute in their own way to daily life in the U.S.A.Â
The U.S. continues living a practical contradiction on the one side being dependent on immigrant labor for affordability and economic growth but also complains about people arrivie to work and study. On the one hand, we have ICE detaining people for speaking Spanish, for being Latino, and hundreds of thousands of deportations happening. On the other hand, we have Latinos, the majority of whom are American citizens. Latinos are part of the economy, of culture, and of music. In the case of Bad Bunny, they make America great.Â
All Puerto Ricans are citizens because Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory. Nevertheless, many assume that being American means being white and speaking English without an accent, which is not true. There are U.S. citizens of all origins, races, skin colors, faiths, and mother tongues. This Super Bowl halftime show was a celebration of that diversity, which makes us strong. Bad Bunny was not out of place in the Super Bowl, but much discrimination against Latinos includes the belief that Latinos are not one hundred percent American.
The upset from MAGA spokespeople is because they do not have control over popular culture. They would like corridos and songs in all genres to be written in celebration of Trump. However, with a few rare exceptions, this is not the case.Â
People vote every few years, but they listen to music every week. The âculture warsâ are not what Fox News says they are. Fox and other right-wing organizations politicize social issues that are at the early stages of the popular opinion shifts that ultimately lead to social change. No cultural product is loved by one hundred percent of the public. Culture is about practice, consumption, and remixing. People choose what type of food, music, and movies to consume time and time again. In recent years, Pedro Pascal, Diego Luna, Oscar Isaac, Benicio del Toro, Marcelo HernĂĄndez, Zoe Saldana, Ana de Armas, Rosario Dawson, Sofia Vergara, to name a few, have played key roles in some of the most popular movies and shows.Â
The takeaway is that Latinos are an important part of the United States and make cultural contributions that benefit the whole world. Besides many transnational influences, collaboration with other artists based in the U.S. and throughout the Americas creates a new cultural reality. This cultural reality is a blend of contributions from Latinos and other U.S.-based artists. Together, we are all stronger, and our music is more universal, as the broad national and international appeal of Bad Bunnyâs performance clearly shows.
Ernesto Castañeda is a political, social, and cultural analyst.
Yesterdayâs Superbowl: A Demonstration of the Inequalities of Football
Football teams have 22 players in addition to punters and kickers. Of those 22, one player, the quarterback, gets 60 % of the attention and credit (and blame) for a teamâs performance. Five other players (the backs and the two ends) get 35% (in other words each get 7%) of the attention. The remaining 5% goes to the 11 members of the defensive team (that is, each get less than a half of 1%). The 5 members of the offensive line (excluding the ends) get 0%. Why is that? The performance of the defensive line can get measured by the number of tackles, sacks and fumble recoveries. But all the offensive line does is block. How can you measure that?
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Drake Maye got all the blame for the Patriotâs poor performance. But the game was really about Seattleâs defensive line which didnât give Maye time to throw, and sacked him a record number of times for a Superbowl. They deserved most of the credit for Seattleâs victory. And the teamâs head coach recognized their performance on stage when the Vince Lombardi trophy was presented. But who were the two players on stage who got to speak for the team? Seattleâs quarterback Sam Darnold and running back Kenneth Walker. And it was Walker who received the trophy.
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Todayâs controversy: 'Walker didnât deserve the trophy, but rather kicker Jason Myers who broke an NFL Super Bowl record with 6 field goals.' That controversy may have been a manifestation of racism. Kickers are white possibly without exception. But what about the Seattleâs defensive linemen? Those who criticized the choice of Walker didnât even consider that maybe the defensive linemen should have been given the trophy. Maybe all 5 of them collectively.
And poor Maye got all the blame for the Patriotâs defeat. But shouldnât most of the blame have gone to the offensive linemen? I suppose if quarterbacks get most of the credit for victories, itâs only logical that they receive the brunt of the blame for defeats. It all shows how unequal and unfair football is.Â
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Venezuela stages Massive Rally demanding Maduro Liberation & Return to Caracas
Caracas, February 4, 2026 (venezuelanalysis.com) â Chavista supporters filled the streets of Caracas on Tuesday to demand the release of President NicolĂĄs Maduro and First Lady and Deputy Cilia Flores. The rally marked one month from their kidnapping on January 3 as part of a US military attack against Venezuela. Heavy gunfire erupts near Presidential [âŠ]
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Bolivia to honor transparent Lithium Deals with Russia & China
Bolivia will honor lithium agreements concluded by the previous government with Russia and China if the integrity and transparency of those deals are confirmed, President Rodrigo Paz said. The deals will be reviewed and made public to allow proper scrutiny, Paz told the Financial Times in an interview published Tuesday. Bolivia controls the Price of [âŠ]
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The US's Magical Realism show in Venezuela
What has happened in Venezuela is not a surprise to those who have read the Magical Realism stories of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and the other famous Latin American writers. In this signature genre of Latin American literature, the writers blur the line between fantasy and facts, weaving magic into reality.
"The Tree Within: The Mexican Nobel Laureate writer Octavio Pazâs Years in India" - Book by Indranil Chakravarty
The Mexican writer Octavio Paz was the most prominent Latin American to understand, analyze, interpret and promote India intellectually and culturally  from a Latin American perspective in the twentieth century. He had first hand experience of India as a diplomat posted in New Delhi for seven years. He has written numerous poems and articles on India. His book "Vislumbres de la India" (In the light of India) is regarded as one of the best introductions to India among Latin American thinkers.  Some cultural visitors from the Spanish-speaking world travel around the country with Pazâs book as an âintimate guideâ. They see India through his eyes, trying to grasp the immense complexity of India.Â
Nicaragua, the âRepublic of Poetsâ has become a âRepublic of Clandestine Poets.â
 Nicaragua, the âRepublic of Poetsâ has become a âRepublic of Clandestine Poets.â
One of the martyred heroes of the Sandinista revolution is Leonel Rugama, the young poet who died in combat at the age of 20. His poem "The Earth is a satellite of the Moon " has been considered by critics as one of the most widely distributed poems in Latin American poetry. It was a poet, Rigoberto Lopez Perez, who assassinated the first Somoza, at a ball in 1956, and was himself beaten and shot to death on the dance floor.
Nicaraguan newspapers used to feature literary supplements filled with poems from both luminaries and unknowns. Leading poets could be spotted, like movie stars, in certain cafes in the cities. In the university town of Leon, busts of Nicaraguan poets and plaques with quotations from their work fill the âPark of Poets,â while the main street, Calle Ruben Dario, is named for the countryâs preeminent poet.Â
Ruben Dario, the poet and writer of Nicaragua is the most well-known in the world. He is considered as the father of the Modernist Movement in Spanish literature in the twentieth century. His book Azul (1888) is said to be the inaugural book of Hispanic-American modernism. He was a precocious poet and published his poem in a newspaper at the age of thirteen.
President Daniel Ortega is a poet, as is his wife, Rosario Murillo. When Ortega was a political prisoner from 1968 (at the age of 23) to 1974 during the dictatorship of Somoza, he wrote many poems, including the famous one titled âI never saw Managua when miniskirts were in fashion.â While in jail he received visits from Rosario Murillo, a poet. The prisoner and visitor fell in love; Murillo became Ortega's wife. She has published several books of poems. One of them is called as šAmar es combatir š- to love is to combat.Â
After the overthrow of the Somoza dictatorship in 1979, the victorious Sandinistas named one of the countryâs most famous poets, Ernesto Cardenal, as minister of culture. He brought poets to all corners of the country to teach people to read and write poetry at a time when Nicaragua suffered a 70 to 95 percent illiteracy rate. It is still possible in villages to find people who are unable to read or write but can recite Darioâs poetry by heart. Poetry was used as a tool for political literacy, consolidating the country as a "Republic of Poets.â
Some of the ministers in the initial years of President Ortega's cabinet were poets and writers. Notable among these is Sergio Ramirez, Gioconda Belli and Ernesto Cardinal.Â
Since his reelection as President in 2007, Daniel Ortega has become authoritarian and has rigged the elections and the constitution to continue as president indefinitely. His wife Rosario Murillo has now become the Co-President after having been Vice-President for some years. The couple have betrayed the noble ideals of the Sandinista revolution and have created a corrupt family dictatorship, similiar to the Somoza dynastic dictatorship which had ruled for 42 years. Most of the writers and intellectuals who had nurtured the revolution eventually left the Sandinista party and started fighting against the dictatorial regime. They used poetry to fight back, just like they did during the revolutionary era against the Somoza dictatorship.  The Ortegas have suppressed dissent and persecuted poets, intellectuals and journalists besides political leaders who resisted their dictatorship. The regime has imprisoned or exiled some of the dissidents, stripped their citizenship and even seized their assets and houses. The regime has become harsher after the large scale public protests in 2018. Many exiled poets and writes live in Costa Rica and Spain. The exiled poets include Sergio RamĂrez, Gioconda Belli and Freddy Quezada. The regime has shut down thousands of NGOs and independent media outlets, including PEN Nicaragua and the Nicaraguan Academy of Language. One of the hardest blows to Nicaraguan literary culture came in 2022 with the cancellation of the Granada International Poetry Festival, created in 2005, which once brought together more than 1,200 poets from 120 countries. The regime revoked the legal status of the NGO that funded it, leading to its cancellation.
While accepting the Cervantes Prize for literature in April 2018, RamĂrez dedicated his award to the young people then protesting Ortegaâs government and to the memory of Nicaraguans who had recently âbeen murdered on the streets after demanding justice and democracy.â
The Ortega-Murillo dictatorship has driven the poetry underground. The poets hide themselves and their poems from the repressive regime which has been ruthlessly censoring literature and news. The poets write clandestinely expressing their frustration and resistance. The "Republic of Poets" has now become the "Republic of Clandestine Poets".Â
Crooked plow- Brazilian novel by Itamar Vieira Junior
Itamar Vieira is a young and upcoming Brazilian writer. Crooked Plow (Torto Arado) is his first novel. He has earlier written a short story collection.
"Small Earthquakes: A Journey Through Lost British History in South Americaâ - book by Shafik Meghji
While the Spanish and Portuguese colonized Latin America, the British have played a significant role in slavery, wars of independence, politics, lending, investment, railways and football in the region. These have been brought out by the author of the book who has done extensive research and travelled through the South American countries which had been impacted by the British.Â
The Marxist school of Dependency Theory - An interview with Professor Jaime Osorio
Our present, however, is one of spiraling crises. Since the financial crash of 2008, the economic crisis converges with ecological collapse and the exhaustion of liberal democratic forms, reaching civilizational dimensions. In this context, the pandemic laid bare how, instead of disappearing, the divide between the center and periphery of the world system is as sharp and as meaningful as ever.Â
With neoliberal hegemony fractured, other ways of thinking and practicing politics have reemerged from their intellectual exiles. Among these, dependency theory stands out as an original and revolutionary contribution of Latin American critical thought, offering tools for understanding uneven capitalist development and imperialism both historically and today. For an introduction to this unique framework, we turn to Dr. Jaime Osorio.Â
When a military coup dâĂ©tat in Chile overthrew the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende on September 11, 1973, Osorio had already been accepted to begin his doctoral studies at the University of Chileâs Center for Socio-Economic Studies (CESO, in Spanish). The dictatorshipâs advance brought him instead to Mexico, where today he ranks as Distinguished Professor at the Autonomous Metropolitan University (UAM) in Xochimilico and as Researcher Emeritus by the National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT). He is the author of many books, including Fundamentos del anĂĄlsis social. La realidad social y su conocimiento and Sistema mundial. Intercambio Desigual y renta de la tierra.Â
In this interview, Osorio speaks with Jacobin contributing editor Hilary Goodfriend about the Marxist school of dependency theory, its origins and principles, and its present-day applications. Â
Dependency theory and its Marxist strain emerged from debates and dialogues about development, underdevelopment, and imperialism in the context of decolonization and the national liberation struggles of the twentieth century. What were the main positions and strategies in dispute, and how did Marxist dependency theorists position themselves in these arguments?
At the theoretical level, Marxist dependency theory [TMD, in Spanish] is the result of the Cuban Revolutionâs victory in 1959. Latin American Marxism was moved by the islandâs gesture. All the main theses about the nature of Latin American societies and the character of revolution came into question.Â
A little over a decade after that event, which sharpened the debates, TMD reached maturity. In those years, some of the proposals that fed theories of dependency emphasized the role of trade relations, such as the âdeterioration of the terms of tradeâ thesis put forward by the [Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean] CEPAL, which referred to the cheapening of primary goods against the rising prices of industrial products in the world market.
Orthodox Marxists highlighted the presence of internal âobstaclesâ that impeded development, like idle terrain in the hands of landowners, which also blocked the expansion of wage relations. Generally, in these proposals, capitalism wasnât to blame. In fact, it was necessary to accelerate its spread so that its inherent contradictions would heighten. Only then could a socialist revolution be proposed, according to this stage-based perspective prevalent in the Communist Parties.
For the Cepalinos, their horizon was achieving advanced capitalism, which would be possible by means of a process of industrialization. This would allow the region to cease exporting primary goods and food products and importing secondary goods, which would now be produced internally, sparking technological development and stemming the outflow of resources.Â
In both proposals, the industrial bourgeoisie had a positive role to play, be it in the medium or long term.
For Marxist dependency theory, the regionâs so-called economic âbackwardnessâ was a result of the formation and expansion of the capitalist world system, whose course produced development and underdevelopment simultaneously. Therefore, these divergent economic histories are not independent processes, nor are they connected tangentially. From this perspective, the fundamental theoretical and historical problem required explaining the processes that generated both development and underdevelopment in the same movement.Â
This problem demanded, furthermore, a response that accounted for how this process is reproduced over time since civilization and barbarism are constantly made anew by the world system.Â
Many of the acclaimed Marxist dependency theoristsâRuy Mauro Marini, Theotonio Dos Santos, Vania Bambirraâshare a trajectory of flight from South American dictatorships and exile in Mexico. You were also subject to this forced displacement. How did these experiences of revolution and counterrevolution influence the construction of TMD?
Four names stand out in the development of TMD: AndrĂ© Gunder Fank, Theotonio Dos Santos, Vania Vambirra, and Ruy Mauro Marini. The first was a German-U.S. economist and the other three Brazilians, who shared readings and discussions in Brazil before the 1964 coup in that country. Subsequently, they found each other in Chile in the late 1960s in the Center for Socio-Economic Studies, until the military coup of 1973. During this periodâat least in the case of the Braziliansâthey produced their principals works with regards to TMD. I had the fortune of meeting and working with Marini in Mexico in the mid-1970s, before his return to Brazil.Â
TMD offers no concessions to the local ruling classes, holding them responsible for the prevailing conditions in which they manage to reap enormous profits in collusion with international capitals, despite [international] value transfers. For this reason, it was hard for these theorists to find spaces for their knowledge in the academic world.
The 1973 military coup in Chile meant that the principal creators of TMD appeared on the search lists of the military forces and their intelligence apparatus. And this coup in Chile, which was preceded by the coup in Brazil in 1964, was followed by many more in the Southern part of the continent, which dispersed and disbanded working groups and closed important spaces in those societies.Â
At the same time, this long counterrevolutionary phase, which was not limited to military governments, favored sweeping transformations in the social sciences, where neoliberal theories and methodological individualism came to reign supreme. TMD emerged in an exceptional period of recent history. However, subsequently and in generalâsaving certain moments and countries in the regionâideal conditions for its development and dissemination have not existed.
In his classic work, The Dialectics of Dependency, Marini defines dependency as a ârelation of subordination between formally independent nations, in whose framework the relations of production of the subordinate nation are modified or recreated in order to ensure the expanded production of dependency.â What are the mechanisms of this expanded production, and how have they changed since Marini formulated his proposal in the 1970s?
When we talk about the processes generated by dependent capitalism, the âdependentâ qualifier isnât redundant. Weâre talking about another way of being capitalist. That is to say that in the world system, diverse forms of capitalism coexist and are integrated, and they feed off each other and deepen their particular forms within the global unity of capital.Â
The heterogeneity of the system can be explained, then, not by the backwardness of some economies, not as prior states [of development], not as deficiencies. Each constitutes its full, mature form of capitalism possible in this system.Â
In this way, with the stroke of a pen, TMD destroyed the hopes of the developmentalists, who supposed that the dependent economies could achieve higher states of welfare and development within this order constituted by capital. For them, it was just a matter of taking advantage of windows that regularly open. There is nothing in the prevailing dynamic to suggest that things are moving in that direction. To the contrary, what is produced and continues to emerge is the âdevelopment of underdevelopment,â so long as capitalist social relations prevail.Â
The gap between underdeveloped and developed capitalism, or between imperialist and dependent capitalism is ever widening. Dependency deepens and more acute modalities are generated. In a world in which digital capitalism is gaining groundâthe internet of things, artificial intelligence, robotics, as an exampleâthis isnât hard to understand.Â
Experiences like that of South Korea canât be repeated at will. They are, instead, exceptions to the rule. Why did the IMF cut off and suffocate the Argentine economy and not extend its hand like imperialist capital did for South Korea after the 1952 war on the peninsula? It was the latterâs exceptional position in a strategic space, which was disrupted by the triumph of Maoâs revolution in China and the need to construct a barrier to prevent the expansion of socialism in Korea, that turned on the faucet of enormous resources, at least for Japan and the United States, and put blinders on those defenders of democracy and the free market when South Korea was governed by a succession of military dictatorships that ferociously applied state intervention, not the free market, to define plans and programs to define priorities for investment and loans.Â
Today, all a government in the dependent world has to do is establish some rules for foreign capital, and the whole clamor and propaganda of transnational media demand that communism be stopped, impeding international loans, blocking access to markets, and seeking to suffocate those alleged subversives.Â
The concept of superexploitation as a mechanism by which dependent capitalists compensate for their subordinate insertion in the international division of labor is perhaps Mariniâs most original and polemic proposal. Some Marxists, for example, protest the possibility of the systematic violation of the law of value. This is a theme that you take up in your debate with the Argentinian researcher Claudio Katz. How do you define superexploitation, and why, or in what terms, do you defend its validity today?
With Mariniâs short book, The Dialectics of Dependency, whose central body was written in 1972 and would be published in 1973, TMD reaches its point of greatest maturity. We can synthesize the nucleus of Mariniâs thesis in the question: How is the reproduction of a capitalism that regularly transfers value to imperialist economies possible?
Itâs possible because in dependent capitalism, a particular form of exploitation is imposed which means that capital isnât just appropriating surplus value, but also part of workersâ consumption fund, which ought to correspond to their salaries, in order to transfer it to their accumulation fund. Thatâs what the category of superexploitation accounts for. If all capital eventually ends up being unpaid labor, in dependent capitalism, all capital is unpaid labor and the appropriated life fund [of the working class].
Mariniâs response is theoretically and politically brilliant, because it allows us to explain the reasons for the multiplication of misery and the devastation of the workers in the dependent world, but also the reasons for which capital is unable to establish stable forms of domination in these regions, regularly expelling huge contingents of workers from its civilizational promises, thrusting them into barbarism and converting them into contingents that resist, revolt, and rise up against the projects of the powerful.Â
Superexploitation has consequences at all levels of Latin American societies. For now, we can emphasize that it accompanies the formation of economies oriented to foreign markets. Following the processes of independence in the nineteenth century, and under the guidance of local capitals, the regionâs economies advanced on the basis of exports, initially of primary materials and foodstuffs, to which we can add, recently, the production and assembly of luxury industrial goods like cars, televisions, state-of-the-art cell phonesâproducts equally distant from the general consumption needs of most of the working population. This is compatible with the dominant modality of exploitation, which seriously impacts salaries, reducing workersâ consumption power and reducing their participation in the formation of a dynamic internal market.Â
Itâs relevant here to consider a significant difference with capitalism in the developed world. There, as capitalism advanced in the nineteenth century, it faced the dilemma that in order to keep expanding, which implied the multiplication of the mass of goods and products, it would need to incorporate workers into consumption. That was achieved by paying salaries with the purchasing power for basic goods such as clothing, shoes, utensils, and home furnishings. This balance was accomplished by introducing improved production techniques, which reduced the pressure to extend the working day by multiplying the mass of products thrown into the market. From there, we can understand the weight of relative surplus value in developed capitalism.Â
But in Latin America, things worked differently. Nineteenth-century capitalism didnât see the need to create markets, because they had been available since the colonial period in the imperialist centers. In addition, English capitalismâs takeoff increased the demand for primary materials and foodstuffs. For this reason, there wasnât any hurry to change the kind of use values and products put on the market. They continued to be foodstuffs and primary goods. In this way, the emergent capitalism in our region was under no pressure to do something qualitatively different. The mass of salaried laborers expanded, but they donât comprise the principal demand for the goods being produced, which was in Europe, the United States, and Asia. Â
Through their insertion in the world market and when it comes time to sell products, Latin American economies transfer value [abroad] for the simple reason that the capitals that operate here have lower compositions and productivities than the capitals in economies that spend more on new machinery, equipment, and technology, allowing them greater productivity and the ability to appropriate value created in other parts of the world. This process is called unequal exchange.Â
It's important to note that unequal exchange occurs in the market, at the moment of the purchase and sale of commodities. Apart from their low organic composition, this concept doesnât tell us much about how these commodities were produced, and above all, what allows for a capitalist process to be reproduced over time in such conditions. Thatâs where super-exploitation comes in.Â
That is the secret that makes dependent capitalism viable. And this calls all the more attention to the errors of people like Claudio Katz, who have formulated proposals that try to eliminate this concept and do so, furthermore, with grotesque arguments, like that Marx never mentioned it in Capital â he refers to [superexploitaiton] many times, in a variety of ways â because that would imply a dilution or a direct attack on his theoretical proposition since capitalism canât annihilate its workforce.Â
Iâm not going to repeat those debates with Katz. I will simply reiterate that Marxâs Capital is a book that is central to the study of capitalism and its contradictions. But no one can claim that it accounts for everything, or that capitalism, in its spread over time, canât exhibit theoretical or historical novelties of any kind. That is a religious reading, but Capital is not a sacred text. Such a position, furthermore, is an attack on a central dimension of Marxism as a theory able to explain not only what has existed, but also that which is new. For this reason, the only orthodoxy Marxism can claim is its mode of reflection.
It's also argued that the spread of superexploitation to the central economies following globalized neoliberal restructuring invalidates its character as a process unique to dependent capitalism.Â
Superexploitation can be present anywhere that capital operates, be that in the developed or underdeveloped world, just like forms of relative surplus value and absolute surplus value. Of course, there is superexploitation in Brazil and Guatemala, just as there is in Germany and South Korea.Â
But thatâs not the problem. Whatâs relevant is to elucidate the weight of these forms of exploitation, which can be present in any capitalist space, in capitalâs reproduction. So the central issue is different, and so are the economic, social, and political consequences.Â
Setting aside periods of crisis, when the most brutal forms of exploitation can be exacerbated everywhere, can capitalism operate in the medium and long term without a market that generates salaries, or with extremely low salaries? Something like if, in Germany, the average salary of the Armenians and Turks was generalized for the entire working population, or if the salaries of Mexican and Central American workers in the United States were predominant there. I donât think so.Â
Finally, what tools or perspectives does Marxist dependency theory offer us in the face of todayâs crises?
In its eagerness to deal with the acute and prolonged capitalist crisis, capital in every region seeks to accentuate forms of exploitation, including superexploitation. It seeks, once again, to reduce rights and benefits. With the war in Ukraine, it has found a good excuse to justify the increase in the price of food, housing, and energy, and its shameless return to the use of fuels that intensify pollution and environmental barbarism, as well as the increase in military budgets at the expense of wages and jobs.Â
The great imperial powers expect the subordination of economies and states to their decisions in periods of this sort. But the current crisis is also accelerating the crisis of hegemony in the world system, which opens spaces for greater degrees of autonomyâwhich does not put an end to dependency. This is evident in Washingtonâs difficulties with disciplining the Latin American and African states to support their position in the conflict in Europe.Â
The scenario in Latin America over the last few decades reveals processes of enormous interest. We have witnessed significant popular mobilization in almost every country in the region, questioning various aspects of the neoliberal tsunami, be it jobs, salaries, retirements, healthcare and education, as well as rights like abortion, recognition of gender identities, lands, water, and much more.Â
On this deeply fractured terrain that capital generates in the dependent world, class disputes tend to intensify. This explains the regular social and political outbursts in our societies. Itâs the result of the barbarity that capitalism imposes on regions like ours.Â
One expression of this social force is manifested in the electoral terrain. But just as quickly as there have been victories, there have been defeats. These comings and goings can be naturalized, but why havenât the victories allowed for lasting processes of change?Â
Of course, this is not to deny that there have been violent coups of a new sort that have managed to unseat governments. But even then, there were already signs of exhaustion that limited the protests, with the clear exception of Bolivia. There is an enormous gap between the leftist voter and the person who occasionally votes for left projects. The neoliberal triumph was not only in the economic policies and transformations it achieved, but also in its installment of a vision and interpretation of the world, its problems, and its solutions.
The struggle against neoliberalism today involves dismantling privatization of every kind and putting a stop to the conversion of social services and policies into private businesses. That means taking on the most economic and politically powerful sectors of capital, with control over state institutions where legislators, judges, and military members operate, together with the main media, schools, and churches. We can add that these are the sectors of capital with the strongest ties to imperialist capitals and their assemblage of supranational institutions, media, and states.Â
It's a powerful social bloc. Itâs hard to think about attacking it without having to attack capitalism itself. Â
Chile: ensaio sobre uma derrota histĂłrica
No dia 4 de setembro de 1970, o povo chileno foi Ă s urnas para eleger Salvador Allende presidente da RepĂșblica. A vitĂłria do socialista foi apertada, mas ainda assim referendada pelo Congresso, apesar das tentativas de golpe que jĂĄ rondavam. Mil dias depois da sua posse, numa terça-feira, 11 de setembro de 1973, o presidente Allende despertou apreensivo com os rumores de traição militar, mas ainda assim determinado a um objetivo: anunciar um plebiscito popular sobre a necessidade de uma Nova Constituição, que superasse os limites da carta vigente desde 1925. Esta, por sua vez, havia sido escrita por uma cĂșpula de supostos âespecialistasâ no governo de Arturo Alessandri, latifundiĂĄrio conhecido como âel LeĂłn de TarapacĂĄâ. A velha Constituição bloqueava o programa revolucionĂĄrio da Unidade Popular, ao assegurar os privilĂ©gios e poderes da classe proprietĂĄria. E Allende era, como se sabe, um sĂ©rio respeitador das leis.
Foi para evitar que Allende convocasse o plebiscito popular para uma Nova Constituição (anĂĄlogo ao que os chilenos de hoje chamaram de âplebiscito de entradaâ) que os comandantes militares anteciparam o golpe de 1973, ordenando o bombardeio ao PalĂĄcio de La Moneda dois dias antes do planejado. Foram informados das intençÔes presidenciais por Pinochet, chefe das Forças Armadas para quem, no domingo anterior, Allende havia confidenciado o anĂșncio do plebiscito em uma conversa privada na chĂĄcara de El Cañaveral.2
O plebiscito da Nova Constituição nunca foi anunciado. Allende morreu, a Unidade Popular foi massacrada. E a ideia allendista de um itinerĂĄrio popular constituinte foi soterrada pela repressĂŁo. A isso seguiu-se a ditadura com quase 4 mil chilenos mortos e desaparecidos, com 38 mil presos e torturados e tambĂ©m com a constituição de 1980, escrita por Jaime GuzmĂĄn, SĂ©rgio de Castro e outros homens da elite ditatorial. A carta teve a habilidade de projetar o âpinochetismo sem Pinochetâ, fundando o Estado subsidiĂĄrio e sua blindagem neoliberal que, por sua vez, foi perpetuada pelo pacto transicional de 1989, avançando por 30 anos de democracia. As dĂ©cadas de 2000 e 2010 foram de crescente luta social contra a constituição pinochetista - culminando com a revolta de 2019 e o tardio colapso total da sua legitimidade.
Retomar esse percurso Ă© importante para que se possa dimensionar o impacto histĂłrico e simbĂłlico do plebiscito de saĂda da Nova Constituição chilena ocorrido em 4 de setembro de 2022, cuja ampla escolha pelo rechazo ainda causa perplexidade e tristeza no movimento apruebista. Era enorme a carga de simbolismo histĂłrico presente nesse plebiscito, a começar pela sua data: o atual itinerĂĄrio constituinte estava desenhado para exorcizar Pinochet no aniversĂĄrio de 52 anos do triunfo eleitoral de Allende.Â
Se supunha que a Nova Constituição (NC), escrita de junho de 2021 a junho de 2022, era a mais genuĂna representação dos anseios populares, a primeira a escutar verdadeiramente as profundas demandas sociais desde o bombardeio de 11 de setembro. Mas nĂŁo era. Dessa vez nĂŁo foi um golpe militar que derrotou o horizonte de igualdade, diversidade, solidariedade e justiça plasmadas na nova carta, mas sim o prĂłprio voto popular, em um enredo que, por isso mesmo, ganhou ares trĂĄgicos. Afinal, foi justamente aquele povo excluĂdo e esquecido, invisibilizado e maltratado pelo Estado/mercado, o povo que a Convenção Constitucional acreditava representar de maneira profunda e inĂ©dita, que manifestou seu desagravo e gerou uma crise de legitimidade dos mecanismos democrĂĄticos mais inovadores do nosso continente.Â
Como explicar a crise de representatividade do organismo supostamente mais representativo da histĂłria chilena?
Voto popular contra a Nova Constituição por classe e território
A Nova Constituição chilena foi escrita por uma Convenção Constitucional (CC) eleita em maio de 2021, com voto facultativo de 6,1 milhĂ”es de eleitores (41% de participação). De maneira inĂ©dita, a CC foi composta por 50% de mulheres (lei 21.216)3 e 11% de povos indĂgenas (lei 21.298)4, e elegeu 32% de convencionales independentes,5 sendo considerada um organismo da mais alta representatividade popular. Apesar do polĂȘmico quĂłrum de â para aprovação das normas constitucionais e da tensĂŁo constante entre movimentos populares e instituiçÔes, a crĂtica avassaladora que a revolta de 2019 produziu Ă s classes polĂticas tradicionais se materializou em um organismo constitucional com rostos novos, formado por dezenas de âpessoas comunsâ, ativistas e lideranças populares. A CC mostrou a possibilidade de alteração rĂĄpida e radical da casta polĂtica, ao ser muito diversa do congresso nacional e dos profissionais de partidos que comandaram o âduopĂłlioâ das trĂȘs dĂ©cadas de democracia no Chile.Â
O resultado foi um texto constitucional atrelado Ă s lutas dos movimentos sociais e aos valores da solidariedade social opostos ao neoliberalismo, um dos documentos mais avançados em direitos sociais e promoção da diversidade dos nossos tempos.Â
Em poucas palavras, eu diria que cinco eixos caracterizavam a Nova Constituição chilena como uma das mais progressistas do mundo:Â
A plurinacionalidade intercultural, a representatividade polĂtica e o direito Ă autodeterminação dos povos indĂgenas, preservando-se a unidade do Estado chileno, conceito inspirado pelo novo constitucionalismo latino-americano inaugurado por Equador (2007) e BolĂvia (2009);Â
Os direitos da natureza e os freios Ă sua mercantilização, recuperando por exemplo o direito universal de acesso Ă ĂĄgua e suplantando o CĂłdigo de Ăguas da ditadura, sendo a primeira constituição do mundo a reconhecer a crise climĂĄtica como emergĂȘncia global e nacional;Â
Os direitos sociais de carĂĄter universal, como a educação gratuita, a saĂșde pĂșblica integral, a aposentadoria solidĂĄria, pĂșblica e tripartite, a moradia e o trabalho dignos (incluindo o direito universal Ă greve inexistente hoje), bem como o direito Ă cultura, ao esporte, a ciĂȘncia e ao tempo livre;Â
Os direitos reprodutivos, econĂŽmicos e polĂticos das mulheres em sentido transversal, assegurando reconhecimento da economia do cuidado e do trabalho domĂ©stico, o combate Ă violĂȘncia de gĂȘnero e a paridade em todos os organismos oficiais, bem como uma perspectiva feminista no sistema de justiça e uma educação nĂŁo sexista;Â
A descentralização do Estado como forma de aprofundar a democracia, garantindo maior orçamento e atribuiçÔes Ă s comunas, provĂncias e regiĂ”es, bem como criando organismos de poder popular vinculantes na formulação de polĂticas pĂșblicas locais e nacionais.
Apesar da NC responder Ă maioria das demandas populares levantadas na revolta de 2019 e nas mobilizaçÔes das dĂ©cadas anteriores, algo na Convenção Constitucional falhou para que o resultado desse grande esforço tenha sido tĂŁo amplamente derrotado. Se por um lado foi evidente o peso das fake news e o volumoso aporte financeiro das elites chilenas na campanha do Rechazo, que recebeu quatro vezes mais dinheiro que a campanha do Apruebo,6 tambĂ©m Ă© importante reconhecer que havia pontos cegos e fraturas na comunicação entre representantes constituintes e as maiorias chilenas. Do contrĂĄrio, a campanha de desinformação das direitas contra a nova carta nĂŁo encontraria terreno tĂŁo fĂ©rtil para se disseminar e prosperar.Â
Chegou-se ao seguinte paradoxo: o voto popular matou o projeto polĂtico mais democrĂĄtico da histĂłria do Chile. O mesmo voto popular que desbancou as elites polĂticas tradicionais, rejeitou o suposto âamadorismoâ dos convencionales, e com isso entregou o bastĂŁo da condução polĂtica constituinte novamente para o congresso.Â
O voto obrigatĂłrio no plebiscito de saĂda foi certamente um dos principais fatores para essa guinada. Diferentemente do plebiscito de entrada em outubro de 2020, com voto facultativo de 7,5 milhĂ”es de chilenos (50% de participação); da eleição dos convencionales em maio de 2021, com voto facultativo de 6,1 milhĂ”es de chilenos (41%); e do 2o turno das eleiçÔes presidenciais que deram vitĂłria Ă coligação âApruebo Dignidadâ com voto facultativo de 8,3 milhĂ”es de chilenos (55,7%), o plebiscito de saĂda teve voto obrigatĂłrio com multa de 180 mil pesos (aproximadamente mil reais) para quem nĂŁo comparecesse Ă s urnas. A obrigatoriedade punitiva do voto com essa altĂssima multa, em um contexto de desemprego, inflação e carestia, deu origem a uma mudança de perfil do eleitor que escapou Ă percepção dos apruebistas. AlĂ©m de inĂ©dita, a participação de 13 milhĂ”es de chilenos (86%) no plebiscito de saĂda forçou a manifestação de mais de 5 milhĂ”es de absenteĂstas histĂłricos, possivelmente o setor menos interessado em polĂtica da sociedade e os mais ausentes nas eleiçÔes da Ășltima dĂ©cada. NĂŁo Ă© nada desprezĂvel o fato de que o plebiscito de saĂda tenha contado com mais que o dobro (216%) do total de votantes das eleiçÔes para os representantes convencionales.
Este Ă© um dos elementos explicativos mais importantes de tamanha quebra de expectativas e da guinada polĂtica entre eleiçÔes tĂŁo prĂłximas. A NC foi rechaçada por 7,8 milhĂ”es de chilenos (61,8%) contra 4,8 milhĂ”es de apruebistas (38,1%). Os votos contrĂĄrios de Rechazo no plebiscito, sozinhos, somaram mais do que o total de votantes no pleito que elegeu os convencionales. Em nĂșmeros absolutos, o quĂłrum de 4 de setembro de 2022 foi o maior de toda a histĂłria chilena.Â
Tais nĂșmeros absolutos devem nos conduzir a uma anĂĄlise dos votos por classes sociais e territĂłrios, como alertou o historiador SĂ©rgio Grez.7 Ao segmentar o total de comunas em quatro estratos de renda, o quintil que reĂșne as comunas mais pobres do paĂs apresentou uma mĂ©dia de 75% rechazo, expressivamente maior que o resultado nacional. As comunas com renda mĂ©dia-baixa rechaçaram o texto em 71%; as mĂ©dia-altas o rechaçaram em 64%; e o quintil de maior renda o rechaçou em 60%. Quanto mais pobres as comunas, mais avassalador foi o rechaço.Â
Em Colchane, por exemplo, a comuna de TarapacĂĄ com mais altos Ăndices de pobreza (24%)8 e que enfrentou a fase mais aguda da crise migratĂłria do Norte, o rechaço obteve 94%. Ao mesmo tempo, provĂncias com maiores Ăndices de população indĂgena tambĂ©m demonstraram altos nĂveis de rechaço, ao contrĂĄrio do que se poderia imaginar. Foram as regiĂ”es de fronteira indĂgena - Ăuble (74%), AraucanĂa (73%), Maule (71%) e Biobio (69%)9 - que obtiveram os maiores nĂveis de rechaço em comparação Ă mĂ©dia nacional. JĂĄ as regiĂ”es com maior aceitação da NC - a RegiĂŁo Metropolitana (RM) e ValparaĂso -, ainda assim experimentaram a derrota do texto, com respectivamente 55% e 57% de rechazo. Em termos nacionais, o Apruebo sĂł obteve maioria em 8 de 346 comunas do paĂs, sendo 5 em ValparaĂso e 3 na RM.10 Entre elas, nĂŁo estĂĄ a comuna de Recoleta, na RM, governada desde 2012 pelo prefeito comunista Daniel Jadue, principal rival de Boric na coligação Apruebo Dignidad. A Recoleta foi palco de experimentos importantes do PC governo, como a universidade popular, as livrarias populares e as farmĂĄcias populares, reunindo habitantes santiaguinos simpĂĄticos Ă esquerda e entusiastas de Jadue. Seus votos do plebiscito, porĂ©m, resultaram em inexplicĂĄveis 51,9% pelo Rechazo.
AlĂ©m disso, como alertou Igor Donoso, nas comunas que âos ambientalistas denominaram zonas de sacrifĂcioâ11 por vivenciarem atividades de extrativismo e conflito socioambiental, o rechaço foi amplamente vitorioso, a despeito das diretrizes ecolĂłgicas da NC que asseguravam os direitos das populaçÔes dos territĂłrios de mineração, pesca industrial, monoculturas florestais e outras atividades predatĂłrias. Nestas âzonas de sacrifĂcioâ, Donoso menciona o triunfo do rechazo em La Ligua (58,93%), Quintero (58,11%), Los Vilos (56,93%), PuchuncavĂ (56,11%), Petorca (56,11%), Villa Alemana (57,82%) e Freirina (55,54%). Nas cidades mineiras afetadas pelo extrativismo e suas contaminaçÔes, o rechaço tambĂ©m venceu amplamente, como em Calama (70,64%) e Rancagua (60,63%).
EmblemĂĄtica dessa contradição territorial foi a comuna de Petorca, cenĂĄrio de uma aguerrida luta popular pelo acesso Ă ĂĄgua na Ășltima dĂ©cada. Ali, a desertificação prejudica os pequenos agricultores e a população em geral, que dependem de caminhĂ”es-pipa para obter a ĂĄgua necessĂĄria Ă sobrevivĂȘncia e Ă produção de alimentos, enquanto grandes empresas monocultoras detĂ©m direitos de propriedade sobre a ĂĄgua inclusive das propriedades camponesas, uma vez que o CĂłdigo de Ăguas de 1981 permitiu a bizarra desassociação dos mercados da terra e da ĂĄgua.12 A eleição de Rodrigo Mundaca, lĂder do Movimento pela Defesa do Acesso Ă Ăgua, Terra e Proteção Ambiental (MODATIMA), a governador da regiĂŁo de ValparaĂso em maio de 2021 indicava uma consistente orientação popular pela agenda ecolĂłgica e contra a privatização da ĂĄgua, princĂpios destacados da NC. No entanto, Petorca derrotou o novo texto com 56% de rechazo,13 o que fez Mundaca declarar: âsinto a incerteza de nĂŁo reconhecer o lugar que habito (...). Parece bastante irracional a votação sustentada por esta comunaâ. 14
Pontos cegos da polĂtica constituinte: causas do rechazo popular
Segundo pesquisa realizada pelo CIPER15 na semana seguinte ao plebiscito, com entrevista a 120 pessoas de 12 comunas com maiorias trabalhadoras, as principais razÔes do voto popular pelo rechazo foram, nesta ordem:
O Estado se apropriaria das casas das pessoas
Os fundos de pensĂŁo nĂŁo seriam herdĂĄveis
O paĂs seria dividido
O governo merece crĂticas (voto castigo)
ContrĂĄrios ao aborto
Â
A pesquisa CADEM feita na mesma semana,16 questionou 1.135 pessoas com a pergunta âqual foi a principal razĂŁo pela qual vocĂȘ votou rechazo?â e obteve como resultado o grĂĄfico abaixo. Foram 40% de entrevistados que atribuĂram seu voto a um processo constituinte âmuy maloâ, que despertou âdesconfiançaâ; 35% de mençÔes crĂticas Ă plurinacionalidade (um dos mais intensos focos de fake news); 29% de desaprovação do governo Boric; 24% de crĂticas Ă instabilidade e insegurança polĂtica e econĂŽmica; 13% contrĂĄrios Ă suposta proibição de saĂșde e educação privadas (fake); 13% de referĂȘncias a um âmal caminoâ do paĂs associado Ă delinquĂȘncia e ao conflito mapuche; 12% de mençÔes contrĂĄrias a uma nova constituição e em defesa da reforma da carta da ditadura; e 8% de referĂȘncias contrĂĄrias ao aborto e Ă s mudanças do sistema polĂtico.Â
Gråfico 1 - RazÔes para votar rechazo (CADEM)
As principais fake news que abalaram o voto apruebista se relacionavam Ă ameaça contra a chilenidade: se disseminou que a plurinacionalidade era o fim da bandeira e do hino, que o Chile iria mudar de nome, que imigrantes venezuelanos e povos indĂgenas tomariam o poder e se tornariam cidadĂŁos privilegiados, sem punibilidade pela justiça, e que os chilenos nĂŁo poderiam mais circular livremente pelo seu prĂłprio territĂłrio (usando como pretexto o desastrado episĂłdio da ex ministra do Interior, Iskia Siches, impedida de realizar uma reuniĂŁo em Temucuicui, AraucanĂa, bloqueada por uma barricada mapuche na primeira quinzena de governo Boric). TambĂ©m os direitos reprodutivos, a constitucionalização do direito ao aborto e o direito Ă diversidade sexual ocuparam um lugar de destaque nas fake news, embora a pesquisa CADEM indique que este nĂŁo tenha sido o ponto mais crĂtico impulsionador do rechazo.Â
AlĂ©m dos conglomerados midiĂĄticos tradicionais da direita e extrema direita, dezenas de contas de Facebook, Youtube e Instagram nĂŁo declaradas ao Servel propagaram, durante meses, uma sĂ©rie de mentiras sobre a NC, se aproveitando do sentimento de insegurança e instabilidade dos mais pobres, em função da crise econĂŽmica, do trauma da pandemia e do flagrante aumento da criminalidade. Medo da violĂȘncia, racismo, xenofobia foram dispositivos conservadores mobilizados em massa, mas que nĂŁo teriam obtido sucesso se tais sentimentos nĂŁo existissem no terreno da experiĂȘncia social e das ideologias populares, como diagnosticou Jorge Magasich.17 Afinal, fake news nĂŁo se propaga no vĂĄcuo.
A opiniĂŁo de que o processo constituinte foi âmal feitoâ, de que a Constituição nĂŁo era uma obra tecnicamente viĂĄvel e que a CC foi marcada por escrachos, anarquia e confusĂŁo Ă© particularmente importante para um paĂs que havia acabado de âdemitirâ sua classe polĂtica e convocar âpessoas comunsâ para o centro da elaboração constituinte. HĂĄ um paradoxo de difĂcil interpretação no fato de que a revolta de 2019 consolidou a crĂtica popular ao duopĂłlio, Ă s instituiçÔes tradicionais e aos profissionais dos partidos, mas que somente trĂȘs anos depois o plebiscito de saĂda tenha desmoralizado os legĂtimos representantes do chileno comum, do lado de fora dos acordĂ”es e diretamente do chĂŁo das ruas. Com isso, o plebiscito de saĂda devolveu a bola para as mesmas instituiçÔes de sempre, que o estallido social havia deslegitimado e declarado incapazes de governar.Â
A ideia de uma Convenção amadora e caĂłtica, que errou mais do que acertou, terminou sendo reiterada por declaraçÔes como de Marcos Arellano, convencional independente da Coordinadora Plurinacional, que pediu desculpas, em nome da CC: âĂ© de exclusiva responsabilidade da Convenção como ĂłrgĂŁoâ, declarou sobre o triunfo do rechazo: âvĂĄrios convencionales tiveram condutas de soberba. Houve falta de solenidade em alguns casos, uma sĂ©rie de performances que afetaram a credibilidade do ĂłrgĂŁoâ.18 Arellano tambĂ©m expressou uma autocrĂtica sobre o uso excessivo das horas de trabalho dos convencionales das portas da CC para dentro, com evidente descaso e descuido com o trabalho de comunicação polĂtica de massas e experiĂȘncia de base nas periferias em defesa do novo texto. Ă fato inegĂĄvel que os debates sobre justiça social, paridade e plurinacionalidade dos convencionales aconteceram em termos que alguns consideraram âacadĂȘmicosâ ou âpos-modernosâ, distantes da realidade vivida pelo povo chileno e de suas subjetividades polĂticas. Essa fratura Ă© trĂĄgica, porque a CC se legitimou como organismo mais popular, representativo e democrĂĄtico da histĂłria do Chile, mas terminou sendo desmoralizada pelo povo que alegava representar.Â
Talvez a vitĂłria retumbante de 78% pelo Apruebo no plebiscito de entrada tenha distorcido a percepção polĂtica sobre o plebiscito de saĂda, subestimando sua dificuldade. O plebiscito de saĂda nĂŁo era nenhum passeio. NĂŁo era uma vitĂłria a mais na coleção de triunfos da esquerda pĂłs-estallido, mas sim outra montanha a ser escalada, dentro de uma correlação de forças mĂłvel, que afinal ofereceu 3,75 milhĂ”es de votos Ă extrema direita com JosĂ© AntĂŽnio Kast em dezembro de 2021. A CN nĂŁo estava ganha apenas pelos significados de justiça e solidariedade mobilizados pelo seu texto em si mesmo. Ainda mais considerando o fator voto obrigatĂłrio e o ponto cego dos 5 milhĂ”es de absenteĂstas agora convertidos em votantes, que sequer se interessaram pelos pleitos anteriores. Era preciso escrever a NC e ao mesmo tempo lutar pela sua comunicação popular nas poblaciones.
Por outro lado, questionar a capacidade tĂ©cnica e a seriedade de um organismo com independentes, mulheres, indĂgenas e lĂderes populares parece ser uma forma trĂĄgica de cair na armadilha das campanhas de deslegitimação arquitetadas pelas direitas (pinochetista e centrista), que buscaram a todo tempo desmoralizar um organismo que permaneceu fora do seu tradicional controle polĂtico. Se levarmos em conta os relatos insuspeitos de uma brasileira, a constitucionalista Ester Rizzi, que esteve dentro da Convenção em fevereiro, os trabalhos estavam eficientes, tĂ©cnicos, organizados e com assessoria de inĂșmeros profissionais competentes emprestados pelas universidades, em um processo constitucional com parcos recursos financeiros e pouco investimento pĂșblico.19 Nesse sentido, a qualidade da NC foi quase um milagre, fruto de um esforço coletivo e tĂ©cnico fenomenal em condiçÔes das mais adversas, que merece aplausos aos convencionales.
Entre as possibilidades nĂŁo aproveitadas pela CC estavam os plebiscitos intermediĂĄrios, que inicialmente visavam contornar o bloqueio dos â de quĂłrum pelo voto popular e superar a impossibilidade de amplos consensos entre convencionales recorrendo Ă s maiorias simples do povo. Talvez a impressionante vitĂłria das esquerdas na eleição da CC em maio de 2021 tenha sido, no mĂ©dio prazo, uma vitĂłria de Pirro, ao gerar um excesso de confiança no procedimento interno do ĂłrgĂŁo, enfraquecendo a comunicação necessĂĄria com as maiorias sociais e descartando os plebiscitos intermediĂĄrios em função dos consensos progressistas dos â de esquerda e centro-esquerda obtidos no caminho. Assim, a CC se fechou em si mesma e se distanciou do processo mobilizador que a tornou possĂvel.Â
Terceiro Turno, derrota de Boric e o novo gabineteÂ
A coligação de Boric, Apruebo Dignidad, carregava no seu nome a opção governista pela NC. Embora tenha se engajado na campanha tardia e timidamente, constrangido pelas imposiçÔes da FiscalĂa que proibia a campanha oficialista para qualquer um dos lados, Boric utilizou a ideia de que a mĂĄxima participação no plebiscito seria em si mesmo um triunfo da democracia. SerĂĄ mesmo?
Entre as causas mais relevantes do rechazo estĂĄ a evidĂȘncia de que o plebiscito representou o terceiro turno das eleiçÔes presidenciais. A mĂĄ avaliação do governo, por sua incapacidade de apresentar soluçÔes compreensĂveis aos problemas do paĂs e melhorias rĂĄpidas da vida popular, somadas as contradiçÔes entre o comportamento de Boric antes e depois de se tornar presidente (sendo a posição contrĂĄria ao âquinto retiroâ dos fundos de pensĂŁo o exemplo mais escancarado), fez cair a popularidade do presidente numa velocidade preocupante. Entre março e setembro de 2022, a aprovação do governo Boric caiu de 50% para 33%, enquanto a reprovação subiu de 20% a 60%. NĂŁo por acaso, a reprovação corresponde Ă votação no Rechazo, como mostra o grĂĄfico abaixo.
Gråfico 2 - Aprovação do presidente Gabriel Boric, mar-set/2022 (CADEM)
Em termos numĂ©ricos, o voto Apruebo correspondeu de maneira quase exata ao voto em Boric no segundo turno (ganhando apenas 200 mil novos apoiadores, de 4,6 milhĂ”es nas eleiçÔes a 4,8 milhĂ”es no plebiscito).20 Territorialmente, a votação do Apruebo foi quase idĂȘntica Ă de Boric. Na RM, por exemplo, Boric teve 2,1 milhĂ”es e o Apruebo 2,2 milhĂ”es. Em ValparaĂso, 545 mil votos em Boric e 583 mil no Apruebo. Na regiĂŁo de OâHiggins, respectivamente 252 mil e 244 mil. As diferenças entre os votos do Boric e do Apruebo foi tĂŁo pequena que se conclui que os quase 5 milhĂ”es de novos votantes no plebiscito de saĂda se direcionaram quase integralmente para o rechazo.Â
A incapacidade do Apruebo de ganhar votos entre o segundo turno presidencial (dezembro de 2021) e o plebiscito (setembro de 2022) diz muito sobre as dificuldades de dois setores das esquerdas em transferir suas agendas de mudança do plano da utopia e da imaginação polĂtica para a vida concreta das maiorias mais desinteressadas do paĂs. Tanto a esquerda centrista do governo com seu modus operandi continuista e atĂ© repressor de movimentos sociais, como as esquerdas de horizontes mais rupturistas que atuaram na CC (chamadas por Boric de maximalistas), por motivos diferentes, nĂŁo conseguiram atingir o objetivo mais crucial de toda sua luta: superar o a Constituição pinochetista/neoliberal e abrir caminho constitucional para um Estado de bem estar social, com justiça distributiva e direitos assegurados.Â
De tudo isso, se apreendeu que a relação entre as multidĂ”es mobilizadas no estallido (que encheram avenidas com milhĂ”es e demonstraram uma convicção impressionante) e as multidĂ”es silenciosas, absenteĂstas e invisibilizadas (que estiveram em casa nos Ășltimos dez anos de eleiçÔes) Ă© profundamente contraditĂłria e muito mais complexa e tensa do que os apruebistas supunham. As classes trabalhadoras sĂŁo heterogĂȘneas e nem sempre se entendem.
A mudança de gabinete de Boric mostrou que das duas coligaçÔes que compĂ”e o governo - Apruebo Dignidad e Socialismo DemocrĂĄtico - a segunda saiu ganhando. A nova ministra do interior, Carolina TohĂĄ (filha do ministro do interior de Allende, JosĂ© TohĂĄ) foi SecretĂĄria Geral da PresidĂȘncia (Segpres) de Bachelet, entrou no lugar da polĂȘmica Iskia Siches, que teve sua reputação derretida em cinco meses de governo, erros vergonhosos e excessivos pedidos de desculpas. A nova Segpres, que substituiu Giorgio Jackson (o engenheiro da Frente Ampla), Ă© Ana Lya Uriarte, que foi chefa de gabinete de Bachelet. Enquanto Siches foi demitida, Jackson, que nĂŁo poderia ficar fora do governo por sua enorme relevĂąncia na trajetĂłria de Boric da FECH Ă presidĂȘncia, foi deslocado para o ministĂ©rio do desenvolvimento social.
O governo Boric, dessa forma, aumentou o nĂșmero de mulheres em seu comitĂȘ polĂtico tanto quanto de bacheletistas, se transformando em uma espĂ©cie de governo Bachelet 3.
Buscando atenuar e naturalizar sua derrota, Boric discursou no 4 de setembro: âno Chile as instituiçÔes funcionam (âŠ), a democracia chilena sai mais robustaâ.21 TambĂ©m apontou para mais um passo em direção Ă moderação, dizendo que âo maximalismo, a violĂȘncia e a intolerĂąncia com que pensa diferente devem ficar definitivamente de ladoâ, como se algum tipo de radicalismo tivesse dado o tom da CC, o que nĂŁo Ă© verdade. Afirmou ainda que âĂ© preciso escutar a voz do povo, nĂŁo sĂł este dia, mas sim de tudo o que aconteceu nestes Ășltimos anos intensosâ. E arrematou: âNĂŁo esqueçamos porque chegamos atĂ© aqui. Este mal estar segue latente e nĂŁo podemos ignorĂĄ-loâ.Â
No mesmo tom de relativização da derrota, a ministra vocera Camila Vallejo, cujo cargo Ă© o equilĂbrio tĂȘnue que segura o Partido Comunista em uma coligação cada vez mais inconveniente, afirmou: âo compromisso do governo de impulsionar seu programa estĂĄ intacto (âŠ). NĂŁo esqueçamos porque estamos aqui. O que nos levou a ser governo foram anos e dĂ©cadas demandando maior justiça social, aposentadoria digna, saĂșde digna, o direito Ă educação. Temos um mandato a cumprir. (âŠ) Estes desafios estĂŁo em pleno trĂąmiteâ.22 Resta saber, ainda, como seria possĂvel cumprir o programa de Boric sem a NC. A verdade inconveniente Ă© a adequação deste programa Ă velha ordem (Bachelet 3).
Limbo constitucional e novo itinerĂĄrioÂ
AtĂ© mesmo os politicos da direita tradicional, comemorando o resultado na sede do comando do Rechazo, afirmaram que a constituição de 1980 estĂĄ morta. Sua campanha esteve baseada em escrever uma âNC melhorâ, âuma que nos unaâ, mais nacional e unitĂĄria, que nĂŁo âdĂvida o paĂsâ, apelando Ă falsa compreensĂŁo do plurinacional como antagĂŽnico ao nacional.Â
Ă certo que haverĂĄ um novo itinerĂĄrio constituinte, mas nĂŁo se sabe ainda quanto da Constituição de 1980 serĂĄ contrabandeada para dentro do novo processo. Fez parte dos acordos pĂłs-estallido a ideia de uma NC a partir de uma folha em branco, contrĂĄria a reformar mais uma vez o texto de Pinochet. Agora, como disse Boric e sua nova ministra Uriarte, o protagonismo serĂĄ do congresso, o que contraria todo esforço da revolta de 2019 atĂ© aqui.Â
 Ainda havia a possibilidade de diferentes modalidades de golpe contra o resultado do plebiscito de entrada, que apontou inequivocamente para uma nova constituição e para uma convenção eleita para este fim, rejeitando que o congresso redigisse o novo texto para envernizar o velho. No dia 12 de setembro, uma reuniĂŁo entre lideranças dos partidos no Parlamento definiu que haverĂĄ sim um âorganismo eleitoâ, possivelmente formado nos prĂłximos meses, e acompanhado de um âcomitĂȘ de expertosâ,23 o que significa o triunfo do neoliberalismo pela tecnocracia.Â
Ganha a interpretação de que a NC foi rechaçada por ser amadora, enquanto a nova carta deverĂĄ ser controlada por saberes tecnocrĂĄticos obviamente vinculados ao mercado e suas normativas tĂpicas. A questĂŁo Ă© que se jĂĄ era difĂcil combater o neoliberalismo com uma nova constituição (cuja aplicação seria desafiadora e dependeria da luta constante dos movimentos sociais), se tornou frustrante e falsificador combatĂȘ-lo submetido a uma tutela tecnocrĂĄtica que emanarĂĄ da racionalidade neoliberal.Â
Mas a luta nĂŁo terminou. Segundo a declaração dos movimentos sociais apĂłs a derrota, âo aprendizado que construĂmos serĂĄ fundamental, porque os movimentos sociais jĂĄ nĂŁo somos o que Ă©ramos antes de escrever esta Constituição. Neste processo o povo aprendeu a auto representar-se, isso nĂŁo Ă© algo dado, depois de dĂ©cadas de exclusĂŁo dos setores populares da vida polĂtica, poder representar a nĂłs mesmas Ă© um trabalho do qual nĂŁo iremos renunciarâ.25
O Rechazo foi um bombardeio Ă s avessas, quase tĂŁo inimaginĂĄvel quanto o do dia 11. O PalĂĄcio de La Moneda nĂŁo foi avariado fĂsica, mas politicamente. Dessa vez nĂŁo de cima pela Força AĂ©rea, mas âdesde abajoâ pela vontade popular, em um estranho paradoxo democrĂĄtico.Â
Para atravessar tempos de derrota histĂłrica, os mapuche usam a palavra âmarichiweuâ, que significa ânunca vĂŁo nos vencerâ, explica Elisa LoncĂłn, a linguista indĂgena que presidiu a primeira metade da CC.25Â
Nos triĂȘnios de 1970-1973 e de 2019-2022, o Chile mostrou sua capacidade de entusiasmar a AmĂ©rica Latina com criatividade polĂtica e projetos utĂłpicos, que inspiram e iluminam povos vizinhos como miragens magnetizantes. Suas derrotas doem, porque tambĂ©m costumam ser nossas.
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-- Jordana
Gang warfare in Haiti (May 23, 2022)
U.S. navigates choppy diplomatic waters (May 20, 2022)
News Briefs
Brazil Supreme Court rejects Bolsonaro complaint (May 19, 2022)
A Brazilian Supreme Court judge rejected a complaint filed by President Jair Bolsonaro in which he accused another justice of abusing his authority, the latest in an ongoing battle between Brazil's executive and judicial branches ahead of October's presidential elections.Â
U.S. encourages Venezuela talks (May 18, 2022)
The U.S. Biden administration has slightly eased restrictions on Chevron's ability to negotiate with Venezuela's government. Senior administration officials said the move was intended to support talks between the government of President NicolĂĄs Maduro and the U.S.-backed opposition, reports the Washington Post.Â
Political Report #1466 The April 2002 Coup Through Time
 by LAP Editor, Steve Ellner
Political Report #1465 âThose Who Are Poor, Die Poorâ | Notes on The Chilean Elections
Political Report 1464 - Nicaragua: Chronicle of an Election Foretold
With seven opposition presidential candidates imprisoned and held incommunicado in the months leading up to the vote and all the remaining contenders but one from miniscule parties closely allied with President Daniel Ortega and his Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN), the results of Nicaraguaâs November 7 presidential elections were a foregone conclusion. The government declared after polls closed that Ortega won 75 percent of the vote and that 65 percent of voters cast ballots. The independent voting rights organization Urnas Abiertas, meanwhile, reported an abstention rate of approximately 80 percent and widespread irregularities at polling stations around the country.
The vote was carried out in a climate of fear and intimidation, with a total absence of safeguards against fraud.The vote was carried out in a climate of fear and intimidation, with a total absence of safeguards against fraud. In a complete breakdown of the rule of law, Ortega carried out a wave of repression from May to October, leading the opposition to issue a joint statement on October 7 calling for a boycott of the election. Several dozen opposition figuresâamong them, presidential candidates, peasant, labor, and student leaders, journalists, and environmentalistsâwere arrested and detained without trial, while several hundred others were forced into exile or underground.
Among those exiled were celebrated novelist Sergio Ramirez, who served as Ortegaâs vice president during the 1980s revolution. While the government charged Ramirez with âconspiracy to undermine national integrity,â his crime was provoking the ire of the regime by publishing his latest novel, Tongolele No SabĂa Bailar, a fictionalized account of the 2018 mass protests that marked the onset of the current political crisis and the degeneration of the regime into dictatorship. The book was promptly banned in the country, with customs authorities ordered to block shipments at ports of entry.
The repression particularly decimated the left-leaning opposition party Democratic Renovation Union (UNAMOS), formerly called the Sandinista Renovation Movement (MRS). The MRS was formed in 1995 by Ortegaâs former comrades in arms who either left the FSLN after the failure of their efforts to democratize it or were expelled for challenging Ortegaâs leadership of the party. Among those UNAMOS leaders arrested and to date held incommunicado are legendary guerrilla commanders Dora MarĂa TĂ©llez and Hugo Torres, as well as deputy foreign minister in the 1980s, Victor Hugo Tinoco, and party president Ana Margarita Vigil. Amnesty International condemned such detentions and incommunicado conditions as âenforced disappearance as a strategy of repression.â
As part of the crackdown the government also banned 24 civic organizations and professional associationsâin addition to some 30 that it had previously banned, including three opposition political parties. The majority of these 24 organizations were professional medical guilds that had come under fire for criticizing the regimeâs handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, including reporting that the government had concealed the number of infections and deaths. Vice President Rosario Murillo accused doctors of âhealth terrorismâ and of spreading âfalse outlooks and newsâ on the impact of the contagion. During the early months of the pandemic the government convened mass public events under the banner of âLove in Times of Covid.â Nicaragua, together with Haiti, has the lowest rate of vaccination in Latin America, with only 4.9 percent of the population inoculated as of October.
In late 2020, the Sandinistas decreed a spate of laws that allows authorities to criminalize anyone who speaks out against the government. Among these are a Cybercrime Law that allows fines and imprisonment of anyone who publishes in the press or on social media what the government deems to be âfalse news.â Meanwhile, a âhate crimesâ law allows life sentences for anyone considered to have carried out âhate crimes,â as defined by the government. Among the varied offenses listed by Sandinista prosecutors for the recent wave of detentions are âconspiracy to undermine national integrity,â âideological falsehood,â âdemanding, exalting, or applauding the imposition of sanctions against the Nicaraguan state and its citizens,â and âusing international funding to create organizations, associations, and foundations to channel funds, through projects or programs that deal with sensitive issues such as sexual diversity groups, the rights of Indigenous communities, or through political marketing on topics such as free expression or democracy.â
A week before the vote, Ortega proclaimed that his wife, Vice President Rosario Murillo, was henceforth the âco-presidentâ of the country. While his bizarre declaration has no legal basis or constitutional legitimacy, it was widely seen as a move to anoint her as his successorâthe 76-year-old Ortega is known to be in ill healthâand a further step towards the rule of a family dynasty. The ruling coupleâs eight children already serve as advisors to the presidency and manage the familyâs empire of private and ostensibly public media outlets, investment funds, and family businesses.
A mid-October poll by CID-Gallupâan independent pollster that has been conducting political opinion surveys in the country since 2011âfound that 76 percent of the countryâs electorate believed the country was moving in the wrong direction. The poll reported that 19 percent of the electorate planned to vote for Ortega, 65 percent stated they would favor an opposition candidate, and 16 percent remained undecided. A rival pollster contracted by the FSLN, M&R, showed Ortega with nearly 80 percent support. While all polls should be assessed with caution given the methodological limitations to surveys conducted amid political instability and civil conflict, it is noteworthy that Ortegaâs support dropped to 19 from the 33 percent support reported by a CID-Gallup survey conducted in May of this year, which in turn was down from the high point of popular support for Ortega, 54 percent, registered in CID-Gallupâs 2012 poll.
Now that the votes have been cast, it is impossible to get accurate figures for the results given that the Sandinistas control the Supreme Electoral Council and exercise a near absolute control over reporting on the results. In addition, independent foreign observers were banned, and the threat of repression has dissuaded journalists and civic organizations from speaking out.
Ortega will now start his fourth consecutive term in office since the FSLN returned to power in 2007 in the midst of economic and political crisis. With its legitimacy shattered in the aftermath of the 2018 mass uprising and its violent repression, the regime has to rely more on direct coercion to maintain control. After the economy contracted each year from 2018 to 2020, the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America estimates a 2.0 percent growth rate for the current year and 1.8 percent for 2022ânot enough for the economy to recover from the three-year tumble. As the crisis has intensified, the number of Nicaraguans trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border climbed to historically unprecedented levels to exceed 50,000 this year, compared to just a few thousand in 2020. These numbers are in addition to the 140,000 who had already fled into exile since 2018, mostly to Costa Rica.
The International Left Remains Divided on Nicaragua
The international left remains divided on the Nicaraguan crisis, with some among it arguing that the Ortega-Murillo regime represents a continuation of the 1980s revolution and that the United States has been attempting to overthrow it. However, as I showed in an earlier NACLA article, there is little evidence to corroborate the claim that the 2018 mass uprising was instigated by Washington in an attempt to carry out a coup dâĂ©tat against the government, or that the United States has since carried out a destabilization campaign aimed at overthrowing the regime.
It was not until the mass protests of 2018 that the co-government pact that Ortega had negotiated with the capitalist class, organized into the Superior Council of Private Enterprise (COSEP), broke down.The Ortega inner circle hacked its way into the ranks of the countryâs elite in the aftermath of the 1980s revolution and launched a new round of capitalist development starting in 2007. During this period, the Sandinista bourgeoisie set about to vastly expand its wealth. Leading Sandinistas grouped around Ortega heavily invested in tourism, agroindustry, finance, import-export, and subcontracting for the maquiladoras. Ortega and Murillo championed a programâdressed in a quasi-leftist discourse of âChristian, Socialist, and Solidarityââ of constructing a populist multiclass alliance under the firm hegemony of capital and Sandinista state elites. This model did improve material conditions until the economy began to tank in 2015. It was not until the mass protests of 2018 that the co-government pact that Ortega had negotiated with the capitalist class, organized into the Superior Council of Private Enterprise (COSEP), broke down.
Washington would have liked to have a more pliant regime in place from the start, and the recent events have upped the ante in U.S.-Nicaragua relations. Nonetheless, successive U.S. administrations accommodated themselves since 2007 to the Ortega government, which cooperated closely with the U.S. Southern Command, the Drug Enforcement Agency, and U.S. immigration policies. Although the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has supplied several million dollars to opposition civic organizations through the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), USAID also granted several hundred million dollars directly to the Ortega government from 2007 until 2018.
On the eve of the Nicaraguan vote, the U.S. Congress passed the RENACER Act, which calls for targeted sanctions on Nicaraguan government officials found guilty of human rights violations and corruption. It also requires the executive branch to determine if Nicaragua should be expelled from the Central American Free Trade Agreement and to âexpand oversightâ of lending to Nicaragua by international financial agencies. In 2017 the U.S. government passed almost identical legislation, the NICA Act, which to date has resulted in sanctions slapped on several dozen top Nicaraguan government officials, affecting the assets they hold in the United States.
Apart from these sanctions on individuals, however, Washington did not enforce the NICA Act. It did not apply trade sanctions and has not blocked Nicaragua from receiving billions of dollars in credits from international agencies. From 2017 to 2021, Nicaragua received a whopping $2.2 billion in aid from the Central American Bank of Economic Integration (BCIE), and in 2020-2021 it received several hundred million in credits from the Inter-American Development Bank, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund.
Some among the international Left condemn calls for sanctions on Ortega. Yet the U.S. and international Left broadly mobilized (unsuccessfully) in 1978 and 1979 to force Washington to impose sanctions on the Somoza dictatorship and block international financing because of the regimeâs gross human rights violations. The worldwide Left similarly demanded sanctions against apartheid South Africa, sought to block U.S. and international financing for the Pinochet dictatorship, and currently calls for âboycott, divestment, and sanctionsâ against Israel.
Grassroots opponents of the Ortega-Murillo regime find themselves between the rock of an Ortega-Murillo dictatorship and the hard place of the capitalist class and its political agents among the traditional conservative parties. The Rightâjust as disturbed as Ortega by the outburst of popular protest from below in the 2018 uprisingâtried to hitch mass discontent to its own agenda of recovering direct political power and assuring there would be no threat to its control over the Nicaraguan economy.
It was the governmentâs repression of the popular uprising of students, workers, feminists, and environmentalists that paved the way for the Rightâs current hegemony over the anti-Sandinista opposition. The mass of Nicaraguansâbeyond the Sandinistasâ secure base in some 20 percent of the populationâhave not shown any enthusiasm for the traditional conservative parties and businessmen that dominate the opposition and have no real political representation. Indeed, the October CID-Gallup poll found that 77 percent of the countryâs electoral does not feel represented by any political party.